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Sharp

Webpages concerning "Sharp"

This document describes Virtual X68000 and the Virtual X68000 Project. The Virtual X68000 Project is an effort to develop a virtual machine or emulator of Sharp X68000 as free (Open-Source[TM]) software. Unlike other works, Virtual X68000 does not require any ROM image to run application programs for X68000.
http://www.vx68k.org/vx68k/
Keywords:
X68000, X680x0, X68k, virtual machine, VM, emulator, free software

http://www.vx68k.org/vx68k/

http://sourceforge.jp/projects/poems/

http://sourceforge.jp/projects/poems/

http://www1.interq.or.jp/~t-takeda/mz2500/

http://www1.interq.or.jp/~t-takeda/mz2500/

http://www.math.uni-magdeburg.de/~mkoeppe/mz800/

http://www.math.uni-magdeburg.de/~mkoeppe/mz800/

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Wikipedia-Article "Sharp"

This article is about the musical notation. For alternate uses, see Sharp (disambiguation).


Figure 1. The note C sharp on the treble clef.
Figure 1. The note C sharp on the treble clef.

In music, sharp means higher in pitch. More specifically, in musical notation, sharp means "higher in pitch by a semitone," and has an associated symbol (\sharp), which looks somewhat like a "#" (number sign). The note C sharp is shown in musical notation in Figure 1. Under equal temperament, B sharp is the same as, or enharmonically equivalent to, C, and E sharp the same as F. There also exist double-sharps, which look like Image:doublesharp.jpg and raise a note by two semitones. Less often one will encounter half or three quarter, or otherwise modified, sharps.

In tuning, sharp can also mean "very in pitch." If two strings or singers are slightly out of tune, the higher-pitched one is said to be sharp with respect to the other.

See also: flat.

The Unicode character '♯' (U+266F) may display as a sharp sign on some computers, and '𝄪' (U+1D12A) may display as a double sharp.

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