Interval class is used in the following ways. First, common in academic set theory, defines it as the octave-equivalent distance between two pitch classes, measured by the shortest distance. Thus C to G may be the interval of 7, but its interval class is 5. The largest interval class or "ic" – in 12edo – is the tritone (6). This may be criticized on two grounds: it is not a class in the vocabulary of mathematics, and it is less useful than the second definition.

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The second definition, used for example by Scala, defines the interval class as the "generic interval" to which the specific intervals at a certain number of scale steps apart belong. The newer term ordinal category has also been used for this second sense. An ordinal category of a scale is simply the set of all k-step intervals, or k-steps, for a specific fixed integer k. For example, the interval class of 2-steps in the diatonic scale (5L 2s) is the set {2L, L + s} = {major third, minor third}.

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