Not just C#, any computer languages that provides the interface features, such as Java, C++ would benefit from applying interface approach - the interface provides the method signatures (contracts), not the implementation (the code). For those who do the programming in 1-person way, this may not make sense. But for those who do the project in 2 or more developers, the interface would provide a way to do the development in 2 or more ways without waiting the rest of the team to finish the coding.
They are different languages, each of them requires its own compiler.
A sharp G G E sharp G E sharp A sharp A sharp C C A sharp C E sharp G A G E sharp A sharp A sharp A sharp G E sharp C this is not on the Flute btw idk what instrument its on
A sharp G G E sharp G E sharp A sharp A sharp C C A sharp C E sharp G A G E sharp A sharp A sharp A sharp G E sharp C this is not on the flute btw idk what instrument its on
here it is C,E,F SHARP,A,G,E,C,A,F SHARP,F SHARP,F SHARP,G,A SHARP,C,C,C,C
You would need Mono/C#
C# Major
I guess you mean Java, there is no interface in C++.
C sharp, D sharp, E natural, F sharp, G sharp, A natural, B sharp & C sharp We call the note C "B sharp" to avoid using the same letter name twice. If we used the note name "C" we would have 2 C-notes and no B-notes in the scale!
The tonic is C sharp.
That would be C-sharp major. Every note is sharp.
The E sharp is the F note. The interval between C sharp and F (e sharp) in two whole steps.
C, C sharp/D flat, D, D sharp/E flat, E, F, F sharp/G flat, G, G sharp/A flat, A, A sharp/B flat, B, C.