att.enclosingChars

Attributes that capture characters used to enclose symbols having a cautionary or editorial function.
Module
Attributes
@enclose
@enclose(optional)Records the characters often used to mark accidentals, articulations, and sometimes notes as having a cautionary or editorial function. For an example of cautionary accidentals enclosed in parentheses, see Read, p. 131, ex. 9-14. Value conforms to data.ENCLOSURE.
@enclose(optional)Records the characters often used to mark accidentals, articulations, and sometimes notes as having a cautionary or editorial function. For an example of cautionary accidentals enclosed in parentheses, see Read, p. 131, ex. 9-14. Value conforms to data.ENCLOSURE.
@enclose(optional)Records the characters often used to mark accidentals, articulations, and sometimes notes as having a cautionary or editorial function. For an example of cautionary accidentals enclosed in parentheses, see Read, p. 131, ex. 9-14. Value conforms to data.ENCLOSURE.
Available at
<accid>Records a temporary alteration to the pitch of a note.
<arpeg>Indicates that the notes of a chord are to be performed successively rather than simultaneously, usually from lowest to highest. Sometimes called a "roll".
<artic>An indication of how to play a note or chord.
<chord>A simultaneous sounding of two or more notes in the same layer *with the same duration*.
<clef>Indication of the exact location of a particular note on the staff and, therefore, the other notes as well.
<mordent>An ornament indicating rapid alternation of the main note with a secondary note, usually a step below, but sometimes a step above.
<note>A single pitched event.
<ornam>An element indicating an ornament that is not a mordent, turn, or trill.
<rest>A non-sounding event found in the source being transcribed.
<trill>Rapid alternation of a note with another (usually at the interval of a second above).
<turn>An ornament consisting of four notes — the upper neighbor of the written note, the written note, the lower neighbor, and the written note.
<arpeg>Indicates that the notes of a chord are to be performed successively rather than simultaneously, usually from lowest to highest. Sometimes called a "roll".
<mordent>An ornament indicating rapid alternation of the main note with a secondary note, usually a step below, but sometimes a step above.
<trill>Rapid alternation of a note with another (usually at the interval of a second above).
<turn>An ornament consisting of four notes — the upper neighbor of the written note, the written note, the lower neighbor, and the written note.
<accid>Records a temporary alteration to the pitch of a note.
<artic>An indication of how to play a note or chord.
<chord>A simultaneous sounding of two or more notes in the same layer *with the same duration*.
<clef>Indication of the exact location of a particular note on the staff and, therefore, the other notes as well.
<note>A single pitched event.
<ornam>An element indicating an ornament that is not a mordent, turn, or trill.
<rest>A non-sounding event found in the source being transcribed.
Declaration
<classSpec rend="add" ident="att.enclosingChars" module="MEI.shared" type="atts">
<desc xml:lang="en">Attributes that capture characters used to enclose symbols having a cautionary or editorial function.</desc>
<attList>
<attDef ident="enclose" usage="opt">
<desc xml:lang="en">Records the characters often used to mark accidentals, articulations, and sometimes notes as having a cautionary or editorial function. For an example of cautionary accidentals enclosed in parentheses, see Read, p. 131, ex. 9-14.</desc>
<datatype>
<ref name="data.ENCLOSURE"/>
</datatype>
</attDef>
</attList>
</classSpec>