Convert between pitches, chords, semitones and frequencies.
pitch_freq(notes, a4 = 440)pitch_semitones(notes)
chord_freq(notes, a4 = 440)
chord_semitones(notes)
freq_pitch(
freq,
octaves = c("tick", "integer"),
accidentals = c("flat", "sharp"),
collapse = FALSE,
a4 = 440
)
freq_semitones(freq, a4 = 440)
semitone_pitch(
semitones,
octaves = c("tick", "integer"),
accidentals = c("flat", "sharp"),
collapse = FALSE
)
semitone_freq(semitones, a4 = 440)
character, noteworthy string, space-delimited or vector of individual entries. See details.
the fixed frequency of the A above middle C, typically 440 Hz.
numeric vector, frequencies in Hz.
NULL
or character, "tick"
or "integer"
octave numbering in result.
NULL
or character, represent accidentals,
"flat"
or "sharp"
.
logical, collapse result into a single string.
key
and style
.
integer values of pitches.
integer, numeric or noteworthy vector
Frequencies are in Hertz. Values are based on the 12-tone equal-tempered
scale. When converting an arbitrary frequency to pitch, it is rounded to the
nearest pitch.
pitch_freq
and pitch_semitones
strictly accept single notes in
noteworthy strings and return numeric vectors.
chord_freq
and chord_semitones
accept any noteworthy string
and always return a list. These are provided so that all functions are
type-safe. See examples.
# NOT RUN {
x <- "a e4 a4 e5 a5"
y <- pitch_freq(x)
y
freq_semitones(y)
freq_pitch(y)
identical(as_noteworthy(x), freq_pitch(y, "integer", collapse = TRUE))
s <- pitch_semitones(x)
s
semitone_pitch(s)
x <- "a, a,c#e"
chord_semitones(x)
chord_freq(x)
# }
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