There are no sharps in F minor.
two. first is F# in scale E minor second is D# has sharpened from D for E harmonic scale.
an f minor scale written with sharps instead of flats, that uses e sharp as the tonic.
F major contains no sharps at all. It contains one flat.
5 sharps. F C G D A
There are four sharps in C sharp minor. These sharps are C# D# F# and G#. The harmonic minor also has B#. (which is C)
two. first is F# in scale E minor second is D# has sharpened from D for E harmonic scale.
an f minor scale written with sharps instead of flats, that uses e sharp as the tonic.
F-sharp minor contains three sharps: F, C, and G.
F major contains no sharps at all. It contains one flat.
If you are asking how many sharps OR flats are in the key of A minor: There are 3 Modes (scales) for minor keys. Natural has no sharps or flats. The scale is A,B,C,D,E,F,G,A. The Melodic has 2 sharps. The scale is A,B,C,D,E,F#,G#,A (ascending) and A,G,F,E,D,C,B,A (descending) Yes, it's different (F#,G#) when you are going up & all naturals when going down. Harmonic is heard most often with a G#. The scale is A,B,C,D,E,F,G#,A. No matter which key you are in, to make the natural become harmonic, just raise the 7th (which is G in A minor) 1/2 step. I hope this is helpful.
5 sharps. F C G D A
There are four sharps in C sharp minor. These sharps are C# D# F# and G#. The harmonic minor also has B#. (which is C)
Two: F# and C#.
It has 6 sharps, but if you are referring to the scale it goes f#, g#, a#, b, c#, d#, f, f#
The E# minor scale is as follows: E#, Fx, G#, A#, B#, Cx, D#, E#
A major has 3 sharps, A minor has no sharps or flats.
Minor and major are two diatonic scales. A minor has no key signature. The key signature of A Major is three sharps, F# C# G#.