The rhythmic meaning of the components of a ligature is typically contextual, not absolute; therefore, an interpretative duration may be encoded on each of the components using either the dur.ges attribute or the num and numbase attribute pair. The ligature element should not be used for brackets in modern notation that indicate notes that were part of a ligature in the original source.
<elementSpec ident="ligature" module="MEI.mensural">
<desc>A mensural notation symbol that combines two or more notes into a single sign.</desc>
<classes>
<memberOf
key="att.common"/>
<memberOf
key="att.facsimile"/>
<memberOf
key="att.ligature.log"/>
<memberOf
key="att.ligature.vis"/>
<memberOf
key="att.ligature.ges"/>
<memberOf
key="att.ligature.anl"/>
<memberOf
key="model.eventLike.mensural"/>
</classes>
<content>
<rng:zeroOrMore>
<rng:choice>
<rng:ref
name="model.appLike"
/>
<rng:ref
name="model.editLike"
/>
<rng:ref
name="model.eventLike"
/>
<rng:ref
name="model.eventLike.mensural"
/>
<rng:ref
name="model.eventLike.neumes"
/>
<rng:ref
name="model.transcriptionLike"
/>
</rng:choice>
</rng:zeroOrMore>
</content>
<remarks>
<p part="N">The rhythmic meaning of the components of a ligature is typically contextual, not
absolute;
therefore, an interpretative duration may be encoded on each of the components using
either
the
<att scheme="TEI">dur.ges</att> attribute or the
<att scheme="TEI">num</att> and
<att scheme="TEI">numbase</att> attribute
pair. The
<gi scheme="MEI">ligature</gi> element should
<hi rend="bold">not</hi> be used for
brackets in modern notation that indicate notes that were part of a ligature in the
original
source.</p>
</remarks>
</elementSpec>