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// You guessed right: the '000' prefix means you should start reading here.
//
// This project is setup to load all files with a numeric prefix. Just create
// a new file and start hacking.
//
// The first few files (00*) are independent of what this program does, an
// experimental skeleton that will hopefully make it both easier for others to
// understand and more malleable, easier to rewrite and remould into radically
// different shapes without breaking in subtle corner cases. The premise is
// that understandability and rewrite-friendliness are related in a virtuous
// cycle. Doing one well makes it easier to do the other.
//
// Lower down, this file contains a legal, bare-bones C++ program. It doesn't
// do anything yet; subsequent files will add behaviors by inserting lines
// into it with directives like:
// :(after "more events")
// This will insert the following lines after a line in the program containing
// the words "more events".
//
// Directives free up the programmer to order code for others to read rather
// than as forced by the computer or compiler. Each individual feature can be
// organized in a self-contained 'layer' that adds code to many different data
// structures and functions all over the program. The right decomposition into
// layers will let each layer make sense in isolation.
//
// "If I look at any small part of it, I can see what is going on -- I don't
// need to refer to other parts to understand what something is doing.
//
// If I look at any large part in overview, I can see what is going on -- I
// don't need to know all the details to get it.
//
// Every level of detail is as locally coherent and as well thought-out as
// any other level."
//
// -- Richard Gabriel, "The Quality Without A Name"
// (http://dreamsongs.com/Files/PatternsOfSoftware.pdf, page 42)
//
// Directives are powerful; they permit inserting or modifying any point in
// the program. Using them tastefully requires mapping out specific lines as
// waypoints for future layers to hook into. Often such waypoints will be in
// comments, capitalized to hint that other layers rely on their presence.
//
// A single waypoint might have many different code fragments hooking into
// it from all over the codebase. Use 'before' directives to insert
// code at a location in order, top to bottom, and 'after' directives to
// insert code in reverse order. By convention waypoints intended for insertion
// before begin with 'End'. Notice below how the layers line up above the "End
// Foo" waypoint.
//
// File 001 File 002 File 003
// ============ =================== ===================
// // Foo
// ------------
// <---- :(before "End Foo")
// ....
// ...
// ------------
// <---------------------------- :(before "End Foo")
// ....
// ...
// // End Foo
// ============
//
// Here's part of a layer in color: http://i.imgur.com/0eONnyX.png. Directives
// are shaded dark. Notice the references to waypoints lower down in this
// file.
//
// Layers do more than just shuffle code around. Past the initial skeleton of
// this program (currently 00*-02*), it ought to be possible to stop loading
// after any file/layer, build and run the program, and pass all tests for
// loaded features. (Relevant is http://youtube.com/watch?v=c8N72t7aScY, a
// scene from "2001: A Space Odyssey".)
//
// This 'subsetting guarantee' ensures that this directory contains a
// cleaned-up narrative of the evolution of this codebase. Organizing
// autobiographically allows a newcomer to rapidly orient himself, reading the
// first few files to understand a simple gestalt of a program's core purpose
// and features, and later gradually working his way through other features as
// the need arises. Each step should be as simple as possible (but no simpler).
//
// Programmers shouldn't need to understand everything about a program to hack
// on it. But they shouldn't be prevented from a thorough understanding of
// each aspect either. The goal of layers is to reward curiosity.
// Includes
// End Includes
// Types
// End Types
// prototypes are auto-generated; define your functions in any order
#include "function_list" // by convention, files ending with '_list' are auto-generated
// Globals
// End Globals
int main(int argc, char* argv[]) {
if (argc > 1) {
// Commandline Options
}
setup();
return 0; // End Main
}
void setup() {
// End Setup
}
// Without directives or with the :(code) directive, lines get added at the
// end.
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