A.19.DECLARED-SUBSTRATE-INTERPRETIVE-VIEW:9 - Consequences
Preface node
heading:a-19-declared-substrate-interpretive-view-9-consequences:25264
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
Benefits
- Readers get one explicit interpretive layer without losing the declared substrate.
- FPF keeps one common interpretive-view family without forcing
G.2or another local specialization to carry the whole interpretive requirement. - Atlas-form interpretation remains available where it helps, but thinner interpretive views stay lawful.
Trade-offs
- The declaration must keep more boundaries explicit: view law, substrate, publication, and policy no longer collapse into one comfortable narrative.
- Some cases that once looked like "just a view" must now say whether they are thin interpretation, atlas interpretation, publication, or policy.
- The pattern requires the base palette or source set to stay recoverable, which can make local prose slightly less terse.
Last Updated: 2026-06-17 — upstream FPF commit 646b0b9b (github.com/ailev/FPF)