The diminished scale alternates whole and half steps in a symmetrical eight-note pattern that repeats every minor third — a jazz staple over diminished and dominant chords.
The diminished scale alternates whole and half steps in a symmetrical eight-note pattern that repeats every minor third — a jazz staple over diminished and dominant chords. On guitar, the a diminished scale uses the notes A, B, C, D, D♯, F, F♯, G♯ — the diagram above shows every one of them across all positions of the neck, with the root (A) highlighted so you can anchor each shape.
KnowYourNeck turns this into an interactive neck you can rotate through every position, switch between note names and scale degrees, and drill one box at a time with Focus Mode. It's the fastest way to actually learn the diminished scale instead of just reading a chart.