The five parallel crosslines used to record notes are called the five-line spectrum. The five lines of the Five-line spectrum are computed from the bottom up.
If a piece of music is written on several lines of music, these lines of music will also be linked by a hyphen.
The concatenation number consists of two parts: the starting line (the vertical line of the Five-line spectrum of a number line) and the ending line (the arc of the Five-line spectrum of a number line.
The two types of flowers and straight lines.
Musical records of piano, organ, accordion, violin, yangqin, and pipa are used.
The straight line is used for combination, chorus, and band notation. In the total spectrum, use a straight line to connect the same instrument and divide them into complete or incomplete instrument groups. Sometimes an auxiliary wire (flower or straight) is added to connect to the same instrument.
In the total spectrum, if the solo voice includes only one or two lines of the Five-line spectrum, draw only one starting line on the left without wiring.
In order to mark too high or too low audio, many short lines are added to or below the five-line spectrum. These short lines are called the plus line, and the plus line is called on the Five-line spectrum. The following is called the plus line.
The reason for the addition is that the addition is called the addition, the addition on the Five-line spectrum is called the addition, and the following is called the lower addition.
The calculation method for adding a line and a plus area is as follows: adding a line and a plus area are calculated from bottom up and from bottom up.