Well on C instrument, such as flutes and percussion, the F major scale is all naturals, except for B flat.
For Alto Saxophone, which mine is E flat, I'm pretty sure it's your d major scale which is just F and C sharp...hope that helps, unfortunately, I don't know what instrument you want to play F major in
The key signature for F major has one flat (B flat) , while the key signature for F minor has four flats (B flat, E flat, A flat, and D flat).
It depends on which key signature. D major has 2 sharps. F# major has 6 sharps. Bb major has no sharps.
One flat, Bb.
D major has a key signature of F sharp and C sharp D minor has a key signature of B flat
There are six sharps in F sharp major.
The key signature of the D major key has nine sharps: F, C, G, D, A, E, B, and F.
D major has F# and C# in it's key signature.
B flat
The key signature of F flat major has all notes flattened, including B, E, A, D, G, and C. This results in a total of six flats in the key signature.
The key signature of D sharp major has nine sharps: F, C, G, D, A, E, B, and F.
The key signature for F major has one flat (B flat) , while the key signature for F minor has four flats (B flat, E flat, A flat, and D flat).
D minor.
It depends on which key signature. D major has 2 sharps. F# major has 6 sharps. Bb major has no sharps.
One flat, Bb.
The key signature of the F flat major key has six flats: B flat, E flat, A flat, D flat, G flat, and C flat.
D major has a key signature of F sharp and C sharp D minor has a key signature of B flat
There are six sharps in F sharp major.