10-20-2020, 08:19 AM
(10-20-2020, 07:02 AM)House de Kris Wrote: Yes, this makes perfect sense. Plus, this is how the SHOULD behave. It makes sense because it appears you aren't fully grasping the beauty of this feature of the NDLR. Please read page 33 of the manual again, the section "Transposing Inbound Notes." You shouldn't be playing any black keys, and all of your complaints are centered on black key operation.
I went to the trouble of making a chart which shows how each key (white and black) get translated for various modes to clearly illustrate what's going on here, but I've found it to be impossible to import it here. So suffice it to say, follow the instructions of page 33 and ONLY PRESS the white keys. Or, in other words, always play in C Major and let NDLR take care of the rest.
Oh wait, I think I figured it out. You'll probably have to click the link to see the text file. One octave is shown. The rows connected with dotted lines represent the white keys. I included three modes of C; Major, Dorian, and Lydian (since you said Dorian had an issue and Lydian did not). This chart should explain what's going on. If not, ask for additional clarification.
Thanks for typing that up, maybe I wasn't clear in my first post.
I realize that the NDLR is transposing the notes, I have read the manual, this was never an issue. The transposition feature works fine, but I want to be able to play the notes as they should be laid out on the keyboard, not just the white keys. I was asking if this is something that can change via setting or if I was just wrong in thinking it could be done this way.
My hope was that the NDLR will correct ONLY the incorrect notes I play. The manual wasn't entirely clear on whether or not this was the case, it just says:
"It may seem weird but The NDLR will transpose in such a way that even a different Mode will map to the white keys starting on “C”
...which wasn't clear to me. Hence my question.