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I'm not sure about the exact rules, but I have an opinion as a performer. If a piece has a coda following the DC or DS it is nice to be reminded or warned again. Same rule of thumb with an "al fine" situation, it just helps clarify the "road map" for the piece of music being performed.
A music notation roughly meaning "go back to the beginning, playing everything again up to the coda.
DC in music stands for Da Capo, which is Italian for "go back to the beginning".Often, DC is used along with DC al Fine, meaning Da Capo al Fine, which means go the the beginning and continue to the "fine", which is the ending.Constrast this with DS, meaning Da Segno, which means go back to the sign, or DS al Fine which means go back to the sign and continue to the ending.Sometimes, there is a coda, which is an alternate ending, somewhat like a secondary or tertiary repeat.
In any music DC Al Fine means play through the end, and then repeat but only play to the Fine.
(music) short for Da Capo al fine: repeat from beginning up to the word fine
(music) short for Da Capo al fine: repeat from beginning up to the word fine
D.C. stands for del capo. Del Capo basically means to go back to the beginning. al Fine means- to (the place where it says) fine. All together, DC al fine means- go back to the beginning and play till the fine.
This term is usually preceded by "Dal Segno" or "Da Capo", which means "from the sign", or "from the beginning", respectively. When used with these terms, it means: "Start from the beginning/sign and play until the coda symbol, then play the coda part".
There is no difference between AC AND DC chockes
The difference AC and DC grounding is that AC is alternate current and DC is direct current. Grounding for both AC and DC is the same.
There is no difference in the cables. The only difference is the type of electrical power being transmitted. AC or DC applications use the same wires.
There is no time difference between Washington, DC, USA and Quito, Ecuador