Ring Tone Text Transfer Language

computing language developed by Nokia for transfer of ringtones to cellphones From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Ring Tone Text Transfer Language (RTTTL), also known as Nokring, was made by Nokia[source?] to allow ringtones to be moved to their cellphones.

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Specifications

This is an RTTTL ringtone. This one is named Haunted House:

HauntHouse: d=4,o=5,b=108: 2a4, 2e, 2d#, 2b4, 2a4, 2c, 2d, 2a#4, 2e., e, 1f4, 1a4, 1d#, 2e., d, 2c., b4, 1a4, 1p, 2a4, 2e, 2d#, 2b4, 2a4, 2c, 2d, 2a#4, 2e., e, 1f4, 1a4, 1d#, 2e., d, 2c., b4, 1a4

RTTTL has three parts, which are all separated by one colon each. All of them must be there.

  • Part 1 - The name of the ringtone, then a comma. This ringtone's name is defined as "HauntHouse" because the name cannot normally be longer than 10 characters or have a colon ":" character. Smart Messaging allows names up to 15 characters in length, and some applications processing RTTTL also do that.
  • Part 2 - The settings (here: d=4,o=5,b=108). "d=" says the default duration of a note is that much of a note. For example, "1" means a whole note, "2" means a half note and so on. "o=" says the default octave. "b=" says the tempo in beats per minute.
  • Part 3 - The notes. Each note is separated by a comma and shown in this order: the duration, a standard music note (a, b, c, d, e, f or g), and an octave. The default is used if no duration or octave is defined.

RTTTL is defined in a similar way to Music Macro Language, which many early microcomputers have in their BASIC implementations.

Durations

These standard musical durations can be used:

Adding a period (".") character to the end of a note increases the length of the note by half, which can be used to make dotted rhythm patterns.

Pitch

These pitches can be used:

  • P - rest or pause
  • A - A
  • A# - A♯ / B♭
  • B - B / C♭
  • C - C
  • C# - C♯ / D♭
  • D - D
  • D# - D♯ / E♭
  • E - E / F♭
  • F - F / E♯
  • F# - F♯ / G♭
  • G - G
  • G# - G♯ / A♭

Octaves

RTTTL has 4 octaves, starting from the A below middle C and going up four octaves, because cellphones could not play some tones audibly at the time it was made. These octaves are numbered from lowest pitch to highest pitch from 4 to 7.

The octave should be left out of the note to prevent rests or pauses in the pattern.

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References

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