Why? I want acoustic electric package in one guitar. In order to install Fishman piezo, I need to replace Tune O Matic with regular acoustic bridge saddle.
Is it success? Uh, oh, maybe.
What about sound after mod? It's nearly acceptable.
Nearly? Err, there's fret bussing, the action of the mod with acoustic saddle is too low.
Just that? There's intonation problem too, I couldn't set individual string length on the bridge.
Have you tune your guitar using clip-on tuner and it's perfectly in tune for all open strings, but it getting horribly out of tune at high fret. Yup, that's intonation problem striking at you.
What's guitar intonation? Well, on traditional style guitar, with straight frets, the fret placement is based on a string or based on 'standard' measurement. The problem with this placement is while it's fine with 1st string, it doesn't sound right with 2nd string (b) or 3rd (G). Of course it's like Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, if we make it work on G-string, it will sound wrong on high-e string.
Can it be solved? Some people using 'true temperament' system on their fretboard. The fret in this system is not straight but have a certain shape in order to get the strings perfectly in tune. Of course different string gauge will need different fret shape so one guitar will stuck on one type of string. (We might use another string, but it will out of tune, maybe worse than standard straight frets).
Okay, it's not generally practical. Is there another way?
This simple program is using an edit as input, a button to trigger processing and a memo for output.
I used edit.text as s value and then reverse its value using for command and saved to rs variable.
We compared s and rs to determine that s is palindrom or not.
Here's the code
unit Unit1;
interface
uses
Windows, Messages, SysUtils, Variants, Classes, Graphics, Controls, Forms,
Dialogs, StdCtrls;
type
TForm1 = class(TForm)
Edit1: TEdit;
Memo1: TMemo;
Button1: TButton;
procedure proses;
procedure FormCreate(Sender: TObject);
procedure Button1Click(Sender: TObject);
private
{ Private declarations }
public
{ Public declarations }
end;
var
Form1: TForm1;
implementation
{$R *.dfm}
procedure tform1.proses;
var s,rs:string;
i:integer;
palindrom:boolean;
begin
memo1.Text:='';
palindrom:=true;
s:=edit1.Text;
for i:=length(s) downto 1 do begin
rs:=rs+s[i];
end;
for i:=1 to length(s) do begin
if s[i]<>rs[i] then begin
palindrom:=false;
break;
end;
end;
memo1.Lines.Append(s);
memo1.Lines.Append(rs);
if palindrom=true then
memo1.Lines.Append('is palindrom')
else
memo1.Lines.Append('is not palindrom');
end;
procedure TForm1.FormCreate(Sender: TObject);
begin
memo1.Text:='';
end;
procedure TForm1.Button1Click(Sender: TObject);
begin
proses;
end;
end.
This code moves the star from cell to cell on string grid.
I use variable s, an array of string type variable.
For delay, or controlling the speed, I use application.processmessages and sleep() combo command.
This code fills cell with blank (space) value that corresponds with s, except one cell. This one cell then "moves" to the right, into the cell next to it.
For this purpose I declare two integer type variable, sx and sy. This variable add itself by one every step. Based on this two variable, the cell that should be filled with star is decided.
A digit word is a word where, after possibly removing some letters, you are left with one of the single digits:
ONE, TWO, THREE, FOUR, FIVE, SIX, SEVEN, EIGHT or NINE.
For example:
• BOUNCE and ANNOUNCE are digit words, since they contain the digit ONE.
• ENCODE is not a digit word, even though it contains an O, N and E, since they are not in order.
Here's my code on Delphi
unit Unit1;
interface
uses
Windows, Messages, SysUtils, Variants, Classes, Graphics, Controls, Forms,
Dialogs, StdCtrls;
type
TForm1 = class(TForm)
Edit1: TEdit;
Button1: TButton;
Memo1: TMemo;
procedure proses;
procedure FormCreate(Sender: TObject);
procedure Button1Click(Sender: TObject);
private
{ Private declarations }
public
{ Public declarations }
end;
var
Form1: TForm1;
digit,cdigit:array[1..9] of string;
implementation
{$R *.dfm}
procedure TForm1.FormCreate(Sender: TObject);
begin
memo1.Text:='';
digit[1]:='one';
digit[2]:='two';
digit[3]:='three';
digit[4]:='four';
digit[5]:='five';
digit[6]:='six';
digit[7]:='seven';
digit[8]:='eight';
digit[9]:='nine';
end;
procedure tform1.proses;
var s:string;
i,j,k,n:integer;
c:array[1..9]of integer;
ck:array[1..9]of boolean;
begin
memo1.Text:='';
s:=edit1.Text;
memo1.Lines.Append(s);
memo1.Lines.Append('');
n:=length(s);
for i:=1 to 9 do begin
cdigit[i]:='';
c[i]:=1;
ck[i]:=true;
end;
//looking for char
for i:=1 to 9 do begin
for j:=1 to length(digit[i]) do begin
if ck[i]=true then begin
ck[i]:=false;
for k:=c[i] to n do begin
if s[k]=digit[i][j] then begin
ck[i]:=true;
cdigit[i]:=cdigit[i]+s[k];
c[i]:=c[i]+1;
break;
end;
end;
end;
end;
end;
//compare
for i:=1 to 9 do begin
memo1.Lines.Append(cdigit[i]);
end;
end;
procedure TForm1.Button1Click(Sender: TObject);
begin
proses;
end;
end.
Suppossed we want to animate our plot, say f(x) = (x-c)^(2) to see the effect of various c value, we could do it in Python using Matplotlib module.
As we could see at the code below that the animation part is in
ani = animation.FuncAnimation(fig, animate, np.arange(-10,10), interval = 25, blit=False)
What about our own def? We could call it inside animate and use variable i (defined in ani, the np.arange(-10,10) part) to whatever treatment on our self define function f(x). In this case, I use i as c parameter value. I like the result, :)