Monday, February 29, 2016

Pitch ~ Scientific Pitch Notation

===.
Text & Pix Format
.
.
Scientific pitch notation
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The first ten Cs in scientific pitch notation
Where C0 is in the region of the lowest possible audible frequency.
.
.
Scientific pitch notation is one of several methods that name the notes of the standard Western chromatic scale by combining a letter name, accidentals, and a number identifying the pitch's octave. The definition of scientific pitch notation in this article is that proposed to the Acoustical Society Of America in 1939, where C0 is in the region of the lowest possible audible frequency.
.
.
===.
Pix Only Format


===.



===.
updating from an earlier post:

===.

subscript & superscript

Please pardon the bad words... it has nothing to do with this subject except that it just happened to be a good example that I found and was curious as to how it was done.

===.
.
.

Question:
How do you make tiny words?
I've tried looking it up but i can't figure it out. How do you make tiny words like this: 
ᶠᶸᶜᵏᵧₒᵤ or ᴸᶤᵏᵉᵧₒᵤ ? 

They told me this but i dont get how to do it? : 

For the upper text, enter: Lalala! 
For the lower text, enter: Lalala! 
and 
hit "ctrl" and "+" at the same time for subscript. hit "shift" "ctrl" "+" at the same time for superscript 

both of them dont make complete sense to me & how to do it. Help please..

Answers:
 B K
 Best Answer:   = superscript 
subscript 

It depends what application you are using, Microsoft Word or some other word processing program, but basically they all do the same thing. You need to hit "superscript" to get the letters above the line and "subscript" to get the letters below the line. Usually these are accessed from a button on your text toolbar (where the font, bold, italic buttons are located). If the button is not visible you might need to customise your toolbar. 

The CTRL + thing might be a specific shortcut but whether or not it works depends on the word processing program you are using.

B K · 6 years ago
.
.
===.