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Tap the or button right after picking a root letter. raises the current root by a semitone — C → C♯. lowers it by a semitone — and you'll see C → B rather than C♭, because Fretscape uses the simpler spelling whenever two names land on the same pitch.

Sharpen or flatten the root

Pick a root letter first (C, D, E, F, G, A, or B), then tap to make it sharp or to make it flat. To swap from sharp to flat (or the other way), tap the opposite button. The current accidental highlights next to the letter, so a B♭ chord shows both the B and the buttons highlighted, and the Building row reads Bb.

Why C♭ shows as B

C♭ and B are the same pitch — what musicians call enharmonic equivalents. Fretscape picks whichever spelling reads more cleanly for chord search, which is almost always the natural-letter version: B instead of C♭, F instead of E♯, E instead of F♭, C instead of B♯.

This usually does what you want. The chord still sounds and plays the same; it just reads as the simpler name.

Picking between C♯ and D♭

C♯ and D♭ are the same pitch too, but neither is "simpler" than the other — they're just two ways to spell the same chord. Fretscape picks one or the other based on your Prefer Sharps / Prefer Flats setting (default: Prefer Sharps).

Open the Settings modal to switch the preference. With Prefer Sharps set, C → ♯ gives you C♯, and typing F♯dim7 keeps it as F♯dim7. Switch to Prefer Flats and the same chords come back as D♭ and G♭dim7. The sound is identical either way — only the displayed name changes.

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