Learn the name of each string on the guitar. The highest string is E, followed by B, G, D, A and E on the lowest string. The highest E string is notated on the fourth space of the treble clef staff. The B is located on the third line. G is located on the second line. D is the first space space below the staff. A is two ledger lines below the staff and E is four spaces below the staff and uses three ledger lines.
Learn the chromatic scale. The chromatic scale consists of 12 notes: C-C#-D-D#-E-F-F#-G-G#-A-A#-B. When you move from one pitch to the next in a chromatic scale, you are moving by half step.
Identify the first note in the guitar tablature. If a four exists on the bottom string, this means you have to notate a pitch four half steps above the lowest string, which is E. When counting half steps, do not count E. Four half steps above E is G#, which would make your first note a G# below the staff.
Identify each note throughout the guitar tablature to determine the notated pitches. If you run into three numbers stacked vertically, that means you have to write a chord into the music. A chord is just three or more notes stacked on top of each other.