Peter Phillips wrote:
> However, I'm not sure about Harald's assertion regarding the timing
> of the digital information on a piano roll. He suggests that there
> is a difference between MIDI data construction and the information
> on a piano roll. I can't agree.
>
> An Ampico roll running at around Tempo 80 [8.0 feet per minute] has
> a timing resolution of 20 milliseconds or so. That is, the minimum
> period between any two rows of holes is 20 milliseconds, quite a high
> resolution.
Let me respectfully disagree (but maybe I just didn't make clear the
level of discussion, which was "in principle/in theory", not "in
practice"):
Any paper roll can have a resolution down to the size of a "paper
atom". There is e.g. no physical reason that prevents punching two
holes for two different notes so that the onset of the notes differs
one nanosecond. Time resolution of a continuously moved paper roll
is analog.
> A MIDI file can be set to have any resolution you want. I use 384
> ticks per quarter note, which at a tempo of 120 [beats per minute]
> equates to 1.30 milliseconds resolution.
No. You cannot set it to a resolution of [square root of 20000] ticks
per quarter, simply because this is not a rational number.
> ... You can have a higher MIDI resolution, but there's little point.
Of course I agree that, in practice, there is a useful upper limit on
time resolution.
> Harald asks a good question about using two levels of pins, or wider
> holes, etc., to record a performance. I'd suggest such a system, if
> it exists, is still essentially digital.
Of course it is :-) But it's not binary.
> But it's still an on-off system ...
Well, no. You cannot map 3 states to on-off: Either you need a
non-integral number of binary digits (or bits), which is physically
impossible to do, or you use 2 bits, but then you have an additional
4th state (i.e., you get redundancy). Also aggregating many
base-3-states into a set of bits will always leave a little redundancy,
as a power of 3 is never equal to a power of 2. So ternary is
fundamentally "non-on-off", or non-binary.
But I'll stop now with my esoteric considerations ...
Regards
Harald M. Mueller
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