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- GUIDO_music_notation abstract "GUIDO Music Notation is a computer music notation system designed to logically represent all aspects of music in a format which is both computer-readable and easily readable by human beings. It was named after Guido of Arezzo, who pioneered today's conventional musical notation 1,000 years ago.First designed by Holger H. Hoos (then at Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany, now at University of British Columbia, Canada) and Keith Hamel (University of British Columbia, Canada). Later developments have been done by the SALIERI Project by Holger H. Hoos, Kai Renz and Jürgen F. Kilian. GUIDO Music Notation has been designed to represent music in a logical format (with the ability to render to sheet music), whereas LilyPond is more narrowly focused on typesetting sheet music. The basic idea behind the GUIDO design is representational adequacy which means that simple musical concepts are represented in a simple way and only complex notions require more complex representations. [1]GUIDO is not primarily focused on conventional music notation, but has been invented as an open format, capable of storing musical, structural, and notational information. GUIDO Music Notation is designed as a flexible and easily extensible open standard. In particular, its syntax does not restrict the features it can represent. Thus, GUIDO can be easily adapted and customized to cover specialized musical concepts as might be required in the context of research projects in computational musicology. More importantly, GUIDO is designed in a way that when using such custom extensions, the resulting GUIDO data can still be processed by other applications that support GUIDO but are not aware of the custom extensions, which are gracefully ignored. This design also greatly facilitates the incremental implementation of GUIDO support in music software, which can speed up the software development process significantly, especially for research software and prototypes.GUIDO has been split into three consecutive layers: BasicGUIDO introduces the main concepts of the GUIDO design and allows to represent much of the conventional music of today. Advanced GUIDO extends Basic GUIDO by adding exact score-formatting and some more advanced musical concepts. Finally, Extended GUIDO can represent user-defined extensions, like microtonal information or user defined pitch classes.".
- GUIDO_music_notation thumbnail GUIDO_music_notation_basic_example.gif?width=300.
- GUIDO_music_notation wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- GUIDO_music_notation wikiPageExternalLink guido.
- GUIDO_music_notation wikiPageExternalLink www.noteserver.org.
- GUIDO_music_notation wikiPageExternalLink about.html.
- GUIDO_music_notation wikiPageID "26654338".
- GUIDO_music_notation wikiPageRevisionID "551619276".
- GUIDO_music_notation hasPhotoCollection GUIDO_music_notation.
- GUIDO_music_notation subject Category:Scorewriters.
- GUIDO_music_notation comment "GUIDO Music Notation is a computer music notation system designed to logically represent all aspects of music in a format which is both computer-readable and easily readable by human beings. It was named after Guido of Arezzo, who pioneered today's conventional musical notation 1,000 years ago.First designed by Holger H. Hoos (then at Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany, now at University of British Columbia, Canada) and Keith Hamel (University of British Columbia, Canada).".
- GUIDO_music_notation label "GUIDO music notation".
- GUIDO_music_notation sameAs m.03cgz.
- GUIDO_music_notation sameAs Q5514807.
- GUIDO_music_notation sameAs Q5514807.
- GUIDO_music_notation wasDerivedFrom GUIDO_music_notation?oldid=551619276.
- GUIDO_music_notation depiction GUIDO_music_notation_basic_example.gif.
- GUIDO_music_notation isPrimaryTopicOf GUIDO_music_notation.