120edo

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Revision as of 15:45, 29 October 2016 by Wikispaces>JosephRuhf (**Imported revision 597455206 - Original comment: **)
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IMPORTED REVISION FROM WIKISPACES

This is an imported revision from Wikispaces. The revision metadata is included below for reference:

This revision was by author JosephRuhf and made on 2016-10-29 15:45:11 UTC.
The original revision id was 597455206.
The revision comment was:

The revision contents are below, presented both in the original Wikispaces Wikitext format, and in HTML exactly as Wikispaces rendered it.

Original Wikitext content:

120edo means division of the octave into equal parts of 10 cents each. Its patent val is contorted only through the 3-limit and does not temper out 81/80 in the 5-limit or 64/63 and 5120/5103 in the 7-limit. However, 5120/5103 is done about as badly as this interval can be done relative to an equal division, falling close to exactly in the middle of a step (1\120 is ~42.42 relative cents sharp of it). Being the simplest division of the octave by the Germanic [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_hundred|long hundred]], it has a unit step which is the fine relative cent of [[1edo]]

Original HTML content:

<html><head><title>120edo</title></head><body>120edo means division of the octave into equal parts of 10 cents each. Its patent val is contorted only through the 3-limit and does not temper out 81/80 in the 5-limit or 64/63 and 5120/5103 in the 7-limit. However, 5120/5103 is done about as badly as this interval can be done relative to an equal division, falling close to exactly in the middle of a step (1\120 is ~42.42 relative cents sharp of it). Being the simplest division of the octave by the Germanic <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_hundred" rel="nofollow">long hundred</a>, it has a unit step which is the fine relative cent of <a class="wiki_link" href="/1edo">1edo</a></body></html>