att.color

Visual color attributes.
Module
Attributes
@color
@color(optional)Used to indicate visual appearance. Do not confuse this with the musical term 'color' as used in pre-CMN notation. Value conforms to data.COLOR.
@color(optional)Used to indicate visual appearance. Do not confuse this with the musical term 'color' as used in pre-CMN notation. Value conforms to data.COLOR.
@color(optional)Used to indicate visual appearance. Do not confuse this with the musical term 'color' as used in pre-CMN notation. Value conforms to data.COLOR.
Available at
<rend>A formatting element indicating special visual rendering, e.g., bold or italicized, of a text word or phrase.
<accid>Records a temporary alteration to the pitch of a note.
<ambNote>Highest or lowest pitch in a score, staff, or layer.
<artic>An indication of how to play a note or chord.
<barLine>Vertical line drawn through one or more staves that divides musical notation into metrical units.
<caesura>Break, pause, or interruption in the normal tempo of a composition. Typically indicated by "railroad tracks", i.e., two diagonal slashes.
<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.
<cpMark>A verbal or graphical indication to copy musical material written elsewhere.
<curve>A curved line that cannot be represented by a more specific element, such as a slur.
<custos>Symbol placed at the end of a line of music to indicate the first note of the next line. Sometimes called a "direct".
<dir>An instruction expressed as a combination of text and symbols, typically above, below, or between staves, but not on the staff — that is not encoded elsewhere in more specific elements, like <tempo>, <dynam> or repeatMark [not available in this MEI customization].
<dot>Dot of augmentation or division.
<dynam>Indication of the volume of a note, phrase, or section of music.
<f>Single element of a figured bass indication.
<fing>An individual finger in a fingering indication.
<fingGrp>A group of individual fingers in a fingering indication.
<grpSym>A brace or bracket used to group two or more staves of a score or part.
<harm>An indication of harmony, e.g., chord names, tablature grids, harmonic analysis, figured bass.
<keyAccid>Accidental in a key signature.
<keySig>Written key signature.
<ligature>A mensural notation symbol that combines two or more notes into a single sign.
<line>A visual line that cannot be represented by a more specific; i.e., semantic, element.
<mensur>Collects information about the metrical relationship between a note value and the next smaller value; that is, either triple or duple.
<mensuration>Captures information about mensuration within bibliographic descriptions.
<metaMark>A graphical or textual statement with additional / explanatory information about the musical text. The textual consequences of this intervention are encoded independently via other means; that is, with elements such as <add>, <del>, etc.
<note>A single pitched event.
<ornam>An element indicating an ornament that is not a mordent, turn, or trill.
<phrase>Indication of 1) a "unified melodic idea" or 2) performance technique.
<proport>Description of note duration as arithmetic ratio.
<refrain>Recurring lyrics, especially at the end of each verse or stanza of a poem or song lyrics; a chorus.
<rest>A non-sounding event found in the source being transcribed.
<stem>A stem element.
<symbol>A reference to a previously defined symbol.
<tabDurSym>A visual indication of the duration of a <tabGrp>.
<tempo>Text and symbols descriptive of tempo, mood, or style, e.g., "allarg.", "a tempo", "cantabile", "Moderato", "♩=60", "Moderato ♩ =60").
<verse>Division of a poem or song lyrics, sometimes having a fixed length, meter or rhyme scheme; a stanza.
<volta>Sung text for a specific iteration of a repeated section of music.
<cpMark>A verbal or graphical indication to copy musical material written elsewhere.
<metaMark>A graphical or textual statement with additional / explanatory information about the musical text. The textual consequences of this intervention are encoded independently via other means; that is, with elements such as <add>, <del>, etc.
<fing>An individual finger in a fingering indication.
<fingGrp>A group of individual fingers in a fingering indication.
<f>Single element of a figured bass indication.
<harm>An indication of harmony, e.g., chord names, tablature grids, harmonic analysis, figured bass.
<mensuration>Captures information about mensuration within bibliographic descriptions.
<refrain>Recurring lyrics, especially at the end of each verse or stanza of a poem or song lyrics; a chorus.
<verse>Division of a poem or song lyrics, sometimes having a fixed length, meter or rhyme scheme; a stanza.
<volta>Sung text for a specific iteration of a repeated section of music.
<ligature>A mensural notation symbol that combines two or more notes into a single sign.
<mensur>Collects information about the metrical relationship between a note value and the next smaller value; that is, either triple or duple.
<proport>Description of note duration as arithmetic ratio.
<stem>A stem element.
<accid>Records a temporary alteration to the pitch of a note.
<ambNote>Highest or lowest pitch in a score, staff, or layer.
<artic>An indication of how to play a note or chord.
<barLine>Vertical line drawn through one or more staves that divides musical notation into metrical units.
<caesura>Break, pause, or interruption in the normal tempo of a composition. Typically indicated by "railroad tracks", i.e., two diagonal slashes.
<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.
<custos>Symbol placed at the end of a line of music to indicate the first note of the next line. Sometimes called a "direct".
<dir>An instruction expressed as a combination of text and symbols, typically above, below, or between staves, but not on the staff — that is not encoded elsewhere in more specific elements, like <tempo>, <dynam> or repeatMark [not available in this MEI customization].
<dot>Dot of augmentation or division.
<dynam>Indication of the volume of a note, phrase, or section of music.
<grpSym>A brace or bracket used to group two or more staves of a score or part.
<keyAccid>Accidental in a key signature.
<keySig>Written key signature.
<note>A single pitched event.
<ornam>An element indicating an ornament that is not a mordent, turn, or trill.
<phrase>Indication of 1) a "unified melodic idea" or 2) performance technique.
<rend>A formatting element indicating special visual rendering, e.g., bold or italicized, of a text word or phrase.
<rest>A non-sounding event found in the source being transcribed.
<symbol>A reference to a previously defined symbol.
<tempo>Text and symbols descriptive of tempo, mood, or style, e.g., "allarg.", "a tempo", "cantabile", "Moderato", "♩=60", "Moderato ♩ =60").
<tabDurSym>A visual indication of the duration of a <tabGrp>.
<curve>A curved line that cannot be represented by a more specific element, such as a slur.
<line>A visual line that cannot be represented by a more specific; i.e., semantic, element.
Declaration
<classSpec xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" rend="add" ident="att.color" module="MEI.shared" type="atts">
<desc xml:lang="en">Visual color attributes.</desc>
<attList>
<attDef ident="color" usage="opt">
<desc xml:lang="en">Used to indicate visual appearance. Do not confuse this with the musical term 'color' as used in pre-CMN notation.</desc>
<datatype>
<ref name="data.COLOR"/>
</datatype>
</attDef>
</attList>
</classSpec>