Talk:Interval of equivalence
Ableton calls it pseudo-octave. Could make sense to add the term here if people coming from there search for it in the wiki. --Frostburn (talk) 07:37, 6 March 2024 (UTC)
- That term also happens to be used commonly to refer to an octave flat or sharp by a comma-sized interval, so that conflicting usage should at least be mentioned if this term is added to the equave article. --CompactStar (talk) 08:20, 6 March 2024 (UTC)
- I added formal octave (from Scala mostly) and pseudo-octave, with a note about CompactStar's comment, as well as formal fifth for generator, with new redirects to go with all that. --Fredg999 (talk) 05:15, 7 March 2024 (UTC)
"Tempering" equaves
This passage doesn't really make sense, and would be really confusing to someone just learning RTT. I vote it gets removed. "If intervals and notes an equave apart are considered to be wholly equivalent to one another, and are collapsed down to a single representative interval (as is usually the case when constructing lattices), this is mathematically identical to tempering out the equave, as it is an interval separating notes that are treated as the same thing. This gives us a tool to formalize the notion of equivalence in the language of regular temperament theory – for example, octave-equivalent meantone is a rank-1 temperament that tempers out 81/80, but also "tempers out" 2/1 (although the kinds of "tempering" are treated completely differently musically, both define an equivalence class of intervals)" --TallKite (talk) 20:58, 24 April 2025 (UTC)