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Basically what I'm supposed to do is make a program that gets the half-steps of a cord, and outputs the cord that many half steps away. I got that working, but I'm not sure what I need to do for my string_to_list function, where I am supposed to split the string that's getting passed into the function then iterate over that list that I split into create tuples.

If someone could help I'd really appreciate it.

def string_to_list(chords_str):
    return chords_str.split()
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  • Why do you think you need such a function? And you are already splitting the list there; if you returned the result of chords_str.split() rather than throwing it away, wouldn't you get what you need? Jan 27, 2018 at 19:31
  • Yes, that gives me exactly what I need, but I'm being asked to implement something like that into my string_to_list function.
    – Hatch
    Jan 27, 2018 at 19:32
  • If I return chords_str.split() Enter the amount of half-steps: -1 D E7 A7 D Gbm G Gbm Em D >>>
    – Hatch
    Jan 27, 2018 at 19:33
  • After you make the list (of strings), make a list of tuples. Each of the tuples will consist of two parts: the root of the chord and the variation of the chord. For example, "D" becomes ("D", ""), "Dsus2" becomes ("D", "sus2"), "F#" becomes ("F#", ""), "F#m" becomes ("F#", "m"). This is what I need to be done inside of my string_to_list.
    – Hatch
    Jan 27, 2018 at 19:34
  • What is the format of the tuple output your looking for from the string_to_list function? Jan 27, 2018 at 19:35

2 Answers 2

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If I'm reading you right I believe code like this will get you what your looking for:

chord_str = 'D D#m Fsus2 Bbmaj7'
test = chord_str.split(' ')
new_list_of_tuples = []
for chord in test:
  if '#' in chord or 'b' in chord:
    new_list_of_tuples.append((chord[:2], chord[2:]))
  else:
    new_list_of_tuples.append((chord[:1], chord[1:]))

print(new_list_of_tuples)

[('D', ''), ('D#', 'm'), ('F', 'sus2'), ('Bb', 'maj7')]

You check to see if a sharp or flat is in the chord name to adjust where you split the string and then add the rest of the string into a tuple.

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  • This would be the string_to_list?
    – Hatch
    Jan 27, 2018 at 19:47
  • Yeah you would pass the chord_str to the string_to_list function then split the string into a list then check each element of the list for the root seperate the root from the variation store it in a tuple and append it to a new list and return that list to do whatever else you need to do in your script Jan 27, 2018 at 19:49
  • You'll probably need to return the new list with the tuples from the function I wrote I didn't put a return statement Jan 27, 2018 at 19:54
  • so just return new_list_of_tuples ?
    – Hatch
    Jan 27, 2018 at 20:16
  • Yes as far as I can tell from your error and the code. I just wrote that as a working example to show that it works you'll need to properly format it as a function and return the list of tuples so you can pass that to your other functions in your script Jan 27, 2018 at 20:18
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Hope this solves your issues: In your transpose function i see that you are creating a scale which i believe is the list of roots.

So i pass the chors string and scale to the string_to_list function. Then for each chord if it start with a root the split the chord on root gives you two items 1. root, 2. variation and hence you can form the tuple.

def string_to_list(chords_str, scale):
    tuple_list = []
    chord_list = chords_str.split()
    for chord in chord_list:
        for root in scale:
            if chord.startswith('root'):
                value = (root, chord.split(root)[1])
                tuple_list.append(value)
                break

    return tuple_list 

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