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When I name a file of a music score on the computer, I use a 'b' as flat and '#' as sharp. My question is is there in the ascii code a way to use the real sharp or flat? No. There is nothing in ASCII. ASCII only has 128 characters, there's no place for musical notation in there.
U266D, U266E, U266F for ♭, ♮, ♯ in Linux Libertine G and Times New Roman, and probably many more fonts supporting a proper subset of Unicode. I’m not seeing those characters in the Times New Roman font set. I’ll keep looking for a musical symbol font.
menu:Insert>Special Characters…. Search for music. Characters 9837, 9838 and 9839: ♭♮♯. Note that some fonts do not include these characters. 1 Like. ajlittoz February 5, 2023, 5:30pm #3. AlainPothen: I have spaces before and after the flat " b ". Edit 1 your question (don’t use a comment) to mention OS name and LO version.
You can enter it anyway using the “unicode toggle” tool in LibreOffice: type 266d and immediately press Alt X. The unicode code will be converted to the right character, and if the font in use does not provide it, LibreOffice will automatically search for a replacement. Character TeXGyreBonumMath for the text editor.
Depends on your computer. I have a Mac, so I open Edit → Emoji & Symbols and type "flat" or "sharp" into the search box. There's also usually some way to type in a numeric code (Unicode or otherwise) for any character if you feel up to memorizing such codes. Wikipedia often mentions the Unicode numbers for particular characters, e.g. sharp.
flat (U266D) ♭ sharp (U266F) ♯ natural (U266E) ♮ But I couldn't find characters for double flat and double sharp (at least not in the character map program I'm using). Are there Unicode characters for double flat 1 and double sharp 2? 1 Other than just two flat characters together; ♭♭ doesn't look quite the same as the double flat in ...
On an instrument suited to playing in equal temperament or close to it — e.g. a conventionally tuned modern piano — transposing won’t make make a big difference to the character of a piece. But on an instrument whose tuning is further from equal-temperament — e.g. a renaissance recorder — transposing will make a big difference ...
Use Format/Character/Features to expose all of the characters. It shows more than Insert/Special character. Many characters come in Special Sets. Others are outside of the UTF-8 character set.For instance DM Sans has a non curled ‘a’ and a flat top ‘3’. You can’t show them on the web and in emails very easily.
If one deliberately needs to determine whether it's a sharpened or flattened note, one could go with those previous suggestions of adding -eesh (sharp) and -eef (flat) to the the notes (-eesh/-eef only determine whether it's a flattened note or sharpened note, those names, -eesh/-eef, do not themselves flatten or sharpen the notes in this ...
If you use the character infrequently you add it to AutoCorrect, e.g. for â (U+00e2) you could make in AutoCorrect the shortcut :a^: (note that :^a: is probably already a shortcut for superscript a). If it is another language that you use frequently you should consider using the language and keyboard for the time that you are working in the ...