User talk:Xenllium
Hi Xenllium, glad to see you using color notation so much! If you have any questions about it, or suggestions for improving it, please don't hesitate to contact me. BTW I recently corrected a few names involving 23 both as a prime and as an exponent. --TallKite (talk) 21:32, 23 February 2019 (UTC)
Hi Xenllium, lots of good edits from you recently. Just curious, are you on our Facebook group? (What is your real name again?) - (https://www.facebook.com/groups/xenwiki/) Mike Battaglia (talk) 01:10, 30 March 2019 (UTC)
No, I am not on any Facebook group. -- Xenllium 03:32, 30 March 2019 (UTC)
Reduce comma tables on EDO pages
Please have a look at Xenharmonic Wiki: Things to do #Comma tables in EDO_pages. Thanks --Xenwolf (talk) 09:09, 11 January 2021 (UTC)
Pentacontatritonic
Hey, Xenllium, I think you'll be happy to know that Pentacontatritonic has finally found a home in the Mercator family. --Aura (talk) 17:21, 10 March 2021 (UTC)
I must mention that we need to talk in order to finalize a name for the 5-limit temperament that gives rise to both Pentacontatritonic and Cartography- at present, the name for this 5-limit temperament is "Schismerc". --Aura (talk) 18:02, 10 March 2021 (UTC)
- Thanks for filling out that data on Joliet Temperament. I've been interested in 17-limit daughter temperaments for Joliet, Cartography, and Pentacontatritonic, though to be fair, I think we need to find really good mappings before we lay down the possibilities- I'll be discussing this matter on Discord if you're interested. --Aura (talk) 14:16, 13 March 2021 (UTC)
Maybe triwellisma instead of triwellsma?
Triwellisma would sound more consistent with orwellisma.
Btw 13-limit sengagen should really be 49f & 50. -- FloraC (talk) 05:06, 24 April 2021 (UTC)
The sengagen temperament can be described as 49&50 temperament, even in 13-limit. It corresponds to "Sengagen 13-limit TOP-RMS" of List of temperaments in Scala.
13-limit 49(patent)&50
Comma list: 351/350, 540/539, 975/968, 1344/1331
Mapping: [<1 1 2 2 3 4|<0 29 16 40 23 -15|]
TE generator: (1200.0391962005, 24.1817281258)
Vals: 49, 50, 99e, 149e
Badness: 0.053531
13-limit 49f&50
Comma list: 144/143, 196/195, 364/363, 625/624
Mapping: [<1 1 2 2 3 3|,<0 29 16 40 23 35|]
TE generator: (1199.1432364156, 24.2164661912)
Vals: 49f, 50, 99ef
Badness: 0.037416
-- Xenllium 10:57, 24 April 2021 (UTC)
How to link to sections
Maybe you are not aware that it's also possible to directly link article sections. This feature is especially useful if the link text suggests you get moved to somewhere specific (with a title you expected). I, personally, feel very confused about being "thrown" onto the beginning of a huge article. The same specificity can be applied to redirects. Please have a look at the following list (corresponding redirects are given in italic in parentheses):
- Icositritonic (Icositritonic)
- Tertiathirds (Tertiathirds)
- Tertiaschis (Tertiaschis)
- Trident (Trident)
- Trillium (Trillium)
- Pseudotrillium (Pseudotrillium)
- Tritricot (Tritricot)
- Decic (Decic)
- Cloudtone (Cloudtone)
- Hemipental (Hemipental)
- Sengasec (Sengasec)
- Qinto (Qinto)
- Monzism (Monzism)
- Houborizic (Houborizic)
- Houbor (Houbor)
- Gamity (Gamity)
- Sabric (Sabric)
- Quadrawell (Quadrawell)
Hope this helps. --Xenwolf (talk) 10:55, 25 April 2021 (UTC)
The temperament names you propose
I'm very interested to read something about the background of these proposals: Are they just your ideas? What are the (linguistic) origins of the names? Why does a specific name fit to a given temperament? Thanks in advance for your answers! --Xenwolf (talk) 06:52, 27 April 2021 (UTC)
- Icositritonic (46&161) - which has a period of 1/23 octave
- Pentacontatritonic (53&265) - which has a period of 1/53 octave
- Tertiathirds (121&270) - which splits major third of 5/4 into three generators
- Tertiaschis (94&159) - which splits fourth of 4/3 into three generators
- Trident (53&229) - which has a slightly sharp fifth (about 702.2 cents)
- Trillium (53&441) - which has a slightly sharp fifth but more accurate than that of trident (about 702.03 cents)
- Pseudotrillium (53&388) - less accurate than trillium
- Tritricot (159&282) - which has a period of 1/3 octave and tempers out the tricot comma
- Decic (10&50) - which has a period of 1/10 octave
- Cloudtone (5&50) - which tempers out cloudy comma (16875/16384) and meantone comma (81/80)
- Hemipental (125&130) - which has a period of 1/5 octave and a generator of 31/2 (hemi-twelfth)
- Sengasec (10&55) - which tempers out the qintosec comma and the sengic comma (686/675)
- Qinto (10&75) - from qintosec
- Monzism (53&559) - which tempers out monzisma
- Houborizic (53&113) - strongly related to the houboriz tuning
- Houbor (7d&53) - as the same reason as the houborizic temperament
- Gamity (46&113) - which tempers out the gamelisma and the amity comma
- Sabric (53&190) - strongly related to the Sabra2 tuning
- Quadrawell (31&212) - which splits orwell supermajor sixth (about 928 cents) into four
- Rainwell (31&265) - which tempers out the rainy comma and the semicomma (orson comma)
- Sengage (49f&50) - from sengagen
-- Xenllium 22:37, 27 April 2021 (UTC)
- Are houboriz tuning, sabra2 tuning, etc. related to algebraic generators? Where do I get all the info about those ? FloraC (talk) 06:13, 28 April 2021 (UTC)
Yes. Houborizic temperament (53&113) and sabric temperament (53&190) have POTE generators that closely approximate houboriz tuning and sabra2 tuning respectively. I get information of houboriz tuning and sabra2 tuning from List of temperaments in Scala.
-- Xenllium 10:58, 28 April 2021 (UTC)