A.19.DECLARED-SUBSTRATE-INTERPRETIVE-VIEW:0.b - First-minute operator cue and confusion guide

Preface node heading:a-19-declared-substrate-interpretive-view-0-b-first-minute-operator-cue-and-confusion-guide:24887

What this page is

This is generated FPF reference text from the specification preface or supporting sections. It helps interpret FPF; it is not FPF Reference product documentation.

Methodology

Use it to understand how the specification wants to be read, then return to a route, pattern, or work packet for active work. Cite generated IDs only when the wording changes the task decision.

Content

Use this pattern only after one substrate is already declared, either cited directly or kept recoverable through one declared source set or declared set result. The first-minute move here is not "write more about the same space". It is "decide what inspection question the reader needs answered without changing the EntityOfConcern".

Do this in the first minute:

  1. Cite the base substrate or the source-set entry point or set-result entry point that stays recoverable with it.
  2. State the inspection question in one sentence.
  3. Choose thin interpretation or atlas interpretation.
  4. Keep the active source set and any active set result recoverable.
  5. Add only the qualifiers that truly discipline the reading.

If you cannot name the base substrate or the recoverable source-set entry point or set-result entry point that carries it, or if the current prose would change the source-to-outcome relation or its posture, stop. You are either repairing the substrate, retargeting the object, or drifting into publication/policy.

If the question under repair sounds like...Use nowWhy
"How do I help the reader inspect the declared substrate?"A.19.DECLARED-SUBSTRATE-INTERPRETIVE-VIEWThis pattern governs substrate-side only reading.
"What is the substrate itself?"A.19.SOURCE-SET-SPACE-SUBSTRATEThe base line has to exist first.
"Which palette-first or tradition-facing atlas reading should I use?"G.2 over this familyThat is one local specialization of atlas interpretation.
"What do we publish, ship, keep live, or plan next?"G.5, G.10, C.19, or C.24Those publication, shipping, live-pool, and planning questions stay outside interpretive views.

Common confusion to kill early: one visible atlas or metric note does not make atlas form automatically necessary. Thin interpretation is already a complete admissible answer.


Last Updated: 2026-06-17 — upstream FPF commit 646b0b9b (github.com/ailev/FPF)