| ▲ | moosedev a day ago | |||||||||||||||||||
This, but (or "and") use the 4-row layout that dozens of tracker programs used[0], to fit over 2 octaves on the computer keyboard. On a US keyboard: QWERTYUIOP[] is the white keys starting at middle C. (The row above is the black keys; the 2 key plays C#.) ZXCVBNM,./ is the white keys starting an octave lower. (S plays a low C#.) The two ranges overlap; e.g. Q and , both play C in the same octave. Grew up composing music on a computer this way when my (musical) keyboard didn't have MIDI and I couldn't afford a better one :) | ||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | wizzwizz4 a day ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||
Can you name a piece of software that uses this scheme? Or, better still, the OG software that used it. If I steal this, I'd like to have something to call it. (I've seen this scheme before: I think it might be used by the keyboard built into the Squeak image that comes with Scratch 1.4.) | ||||||||||||||||||||
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