Notification Tones - Casio Privia PX-S1000 User Manual

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■ Touch Button + Keyboard Key Combinations
A number of different Digital Piano settings can be configured
by using a touch button (except for the 70 (REC) button) in
combination with a keyboard key. As an example, the
procedure shows how to select the JAZZ ORGAN tone.
A0
C1
C2
C C
C3
B1
1.
Hold down 8 GRAND PIANO.
• Until you release 8 GRAND PIANO in step 3 below,
you can use keyboard keys to select tones and to
configure other settings. For information about what
operations you can perform while 8 GRAND PIANO
is depressed, see the separate "Keyboard Function
List".
2.
Press the B1 keyboard key.
This selects the JAZZ ORGAN tone and causes the
confirmation tone to sound using the JAZZ ORGAN tone.
3.
Release 8 GRAND PIANO.
• Now you can play on the keyboard with the JAZZ
ORGAN tone.
C4
C5
C6
C7

Notification Tones

When you perform a touch button and keyboard key
combination operation (page EN-9), a notification tone will
sound when you press the keyboard key to let you know the
result of the operation. Notification tone types are described
below.
C8
■ Notification Tone Types
This type of
tone sounds:
Received
tone
Invalid tone
Upper limit,
lower limit
tone
Initialization
tone
Option tone
Off tone
Reference
tone
End tone
■ Notification Tone Sets
Your Digital Piano comes with three different notification tone
sets from which you can choose. You can also disable
notification tones, if you want. For information about how to
change the notification tone set, see
EN-34).
Operations Common to All Modes
When this happens:
A keyboard key operation is received and
applied. This tone sounds if a setting is
enabled (turned on) when you press a
keyboard key that toggles the setting
between enabled and disabled.
You press the wrong keyboard key. This
tone lets you know the operation is invalid.
You press a keyboard key that would cause
the setting to become greater than the
upper limit or less than the lower limit.
Settings were returned to the initial defaults.
This tone sounds when you press the plus
(+) and minus (–) keyboard keys at the
same time, etc.
A setting option is changed by pressing a
keyboard key that cycles through options.
The number of times the tone sounds
depends on the option that is selected.
A setting is disabled (turned off).
As you use the plus (+) and minus (–)
keyboard keys to change a setting value, a
reference tone will sound to signal when the
keyboard key operation result in certain
types of values to be set. In the case of
whole number (non-fraction) values, the
reference tone will sound whenever the
setting becomes one that is multiple of 10
(10, 20, etc.) In the case of fraction values
(like 440.2), the reference tone will sound
whenever the setting becomes a value that
is a whole number (440, 441, etc.)
The final keyboard key was pressed for a
setting operation that requires multiple
keyboard key operations. For example,
when you input a three-digit tempo setting,
this tone will sound when you press the
keyboard key for the third digit.
"Other
Settings" (page
EN-9

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