There are cases where the upper voices remain on the same notes and it is the bass the only that moves. In general, one need to decide whether or not to annotate a different inversion for each of the bass notes (I'd say no). If the motion in the bass is upward, it might be easy to decide. When the bass goes down in the arpeggio, one has three options:
-
annotate all inversions

-
annotate the inversion that appears first

-
annotate the inversion that appears last so to be faithful to the voice-leading towards the following chord. In this case, where? over the first or over the last note of the arpeggio?

-
aanotate the first an the last inversions

Source: Dirò che fida sei from D.N. Sarro's Didone abbandonata (1730)
Further examples coming
There are cases where the upper voices remain on the same notes and it is the bass the only that moves. In general, one need to decide whether or not to annotate a different inversion for each of the bass notes (I'd say no). If the motion in the bass is upward, it might be easy to decide. When the bass goes down in the arpeggio, one has three options:
annotate all inversions

annotate the inversion that appears first

annotate the inversion that appears last so to be faithful to the voice-leading towards the following chord. In this case, where? over the first or over the last note of the arpeggio?

aanotate the first an the last inversions

Source: Dirò che fida sei from D.N. Sarro's Didone abbandonata (1730)
Further examples coming