E natural and F natural are a half step away. With accidental marks like # and b, they tell you to either move up or down a half step. There's another two, but I can't show them on this answer thing. But those are the only ones that make you move up or down a whole step.
So, Fb would be moving down a half step. Move down a half step and you've got E natural.
No:
E# = F natural
Fb = E natural
The reason for this is that there is no black key between E and F on a piano. From E to F is a half-step (there are no notes in between).
Yes, E flat is the same as D sharp. On a piano D shap is D but up one Semi-tone and E flat is E but down one Semi-tone, thus landing on the same key.
No. E-flat and D-sharp are the same. F-flat and E are the same. E-sharp and F are the same.
A half is one half step lower than a natural.
F sharp is the same note.
15 different key signatures exist. (no sharps or flats) = C major F sharp= G major F C sharp = D major F C G sharp = A major F C G D sharp = E major F C G D A sharp = B major F C G D A E sharp = F # major F C G D A E B sharp = C# major B E A D G C F flat = C flat major B E A D G C flat = G flat major B E A D G flat = D flat major B E A D flat = A flat major B E A flat =E flat major B E flat =B flat major B flat = F major
g sharp would be g sharp or a minor. d sharp would be d sharp or e flat. a sharp would be a sharp or b flat. c sharp would be c sharp or d flat. f sharp would be f sharp or g flat. e sharp would be e sharp or f slat for which there is no such note. and g natural would be g natural.
It would be a sharp/flat. Like A would be A#/Bb
UP: d sharp e sharp f sharp g sharp a sharp b sharp c double-sharp d sharp DOWN: d sharp c sharp b natural a sharp g sharp f sharp e sharp d sharp
D sharp is the same as E flat, if that helps.
A D-flat is also an E-sharp in music. Technically, if you flat an E-sharp, you have an E, not a really flat D-flat.
The black key between D and E. D# is the same as E flat.
a flat( or g sharp),a, b flat( or a sharp), b, c flat (or b sharp), c, c sharp (or d flat), d, e flat (or d sharp), e, f flat( or e sharp), f, f sharp ( or g flat)and g.
a flat( or g sharp),a, b flat( or a sharp), b, c flat (or b sharp), c, c sharp (or d flat), d, e flat (or d sharp), e, f flat( or e sharp), f, f sharp ( or g flat)and g.
a flat( or g sharp),a, b flat( or a sharp), b, c flat (or b sharp), c, c sharp (or d flat), d, e flat (or d sharp), e, f flat( or e sharp), f, f sharp ( or g flat)and g.
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.
if you are talking about notes: 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 etc...
F sharp is the same note.
E-flat can also be D-sharp, F-sharp can be G-flat, and A-flat can be G-sharp
C sharp/D flat, D sharp/E flat, F sharp/G flat, G sharp/A flat, A sharp/B flat
Not sure exactly what you mean by the question, but in general, for written music purposes, an E flat is the same as D sharp. On a b-flat trumpet, E flat is fingered as 2-3.