Certainly, to use a chromatic tuner, you just have to know the notes you need. For most ukuleles that will be GCDE with the C being the lowest note.
If you aren't sure of your ear tuning ablities, you'd best use it.
Yes, as long as it shows the notes and not the string number you can use it for an ukulele. Many chromatic tuners have a mode setting that will allow you to change to different instruments.
A chromatic tuner is one which can tune any note (C,C#,D,D# etc.). This makes it useful if you want to tune guitar strings to a different pitch or just simply want to tune a particular note on an instrument.
You will have to go through the notes chromatically until the waves of their voice match the waves of the pitch.
Zach uses a NS-2 Noise Suppressor and a chromatic tuner both made by boss for Tim I'm not sure
I'm not sure what a guitalele is, but tuners typically now have a variety of settings and there are settings for chromatic tuning, so if you know the notes the strings are supposed to play, you can use it.
no you can not you have to use a tuner
when notating a chromatic scale, use sharps for ascending pitches and flats for descending pitches.
No, Seiko watches do not have Swiss movements. Seiko is a Japanese watch brand and they typically use in-house movements made by their own factories.
Chromatic. Diatonic autoharps hadn't been invented yet.
You can use a pitch pipe to get the right notes. But the tuning and order of the strings is different. For a guitar it is E A D G B E. For a violin it is G D A E. You could tune the guitar's A string using the violin tuner and then tune the rest from the A. Could be there's an octave's difference, though.