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From: | lilypond |
Subject: | Re: Issue 1110 in lilypond: Wrong octave of repetition chord with \relative and #{ #} syntax |
Date: | Wed, 25 Jan 2012 18:07:48 +0000 |
Updates: Status: Started Owner: address@hidden Labels: -Patch-needs_workComment #35 on issue 1110 by address@hidden: Wrong octave of repetition chord with \relative and #{ #} syntax
http://code.google.com/p/lilypond/issues/detail?id=1110Ok, I have mulled this over and decided that introducing a third "what was the last $x" concept is not going to make things better understandable. So I'll go for the duplicitous approach: the "last" chord is the last chord the parser has seen, unless \relative runs over it, in which case the "last" chord is the last chord \relative has seen.
Chances are that people will be using \relative either consistently, or consistently not, and so they get to see consistent behavior for q even though we have two different approaches.
If q in \relative is _not_ preceded by a chord, I'll probably just let it be dealt with like a freshly entered relative chord without generating a warning.
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