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Re:what does adorn mean in this context? question continues GDP


From: Jay Hamilton
Subject: Re:what does adorn mean in this context? question continues GDP
Date: Thu, 21 Feb 2008 19:17:23 -0800

I knew/know what adorn in English and articulations are in music however in the 
context of 1.7.2.1 of the GDP they don't seem to mean that.  What is 'adorned' 
here?  Does it mean enhanced? (not to me)  And looking at the code and seeing 
the result does anyone see a difference between text and GrobText?

Just need an clearer way to say whatever it is that is happening with this code.

Thanks in advance.


Yours-
Jay

Jay Hamilton
www.soundand.com
206-328-7694


Message: 6
Date: Tue, 19 Feb 2008 09:20:09 +0100
From: Nicholas WASTELL <address@hidden>
Subject: Re: what does adorn mean in this context? GDP
To: address@hidden
Cc: address@hidden
Message-ID: <address@hidden>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

On Mon, 18 Feb 2008 18:26:58 -0800
"Jay Hamilton" <address@hidden> wrote:

> There are two music functions, balloonGrobText and balloonText; the former 
> takes the name of the grob to adorn, while the latter may be used as an 
> articulation on a note. The other arguments are the offset and the text of 
> the label.
> 
> the words after the semicolon (;) look like they make sense but adorn and 
> articulation don't really make sense

I'm a native English (en-GB) speaker, but I am not familiar with the balloon 
function. ;-)  However:

To adorn is to decorate and enhance.  It's rather an old-fashioned word, I 
suppose. <http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/adorn>

Articulation in this context is a musical term, meaning a mark (e.g., accent, 
staccato dot, stopped mark) against a note showing how it should be delivered 
(i.e., articulated).  <http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/articulation>

It doesn't explain (to me) the difference between the two functions.  I'd have 
a look in LSR, but it appears to be down at the moment.

hth,

Nick.
-- 
Nicholas WASTELL
France






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