A.19.DECLARED-SUBSTRATE-INTERPRETIVE-VIEW:0.1 - What goes wrong if missed
Preface node
heading:a-19-declared-substrate-interpretive-view-0-1-what-goes-wrong-if-missed:24851
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
If this pattern is missed, interpretive-view work usually fails in one of four ways:
- the substrate is forced to carry every inspection question itself, so
A.19.SOURCE-SET-SPACE-SUBSTRATEstarts reading as if it also governed interpretive views, atlas readings, or palette interpretation; - the word
viewappears as one fresh local theory, detached from existingU.EpistemicViewingandU.MultiViewDescribing, so viewpoint, view, and publication face start collapsing again; - one atlas-form reading quietly becomes the default meaning of the whole family, so a fuller interpretive form starts redefining the base palette or base source set;
- or qualifier refs such as
OutcomeMapRef,SpaceMetricRef,TransitionRelationRef, andBridgeDistortionNoteeither disappear into vague prose or are promoted into mandatory core everywhere.
The reader then cannot tell whether a visible interpretation is one optional interpretive view, one fuller atlas reading, one publication face, or one new semantic head.
Last Updated: 2026-06-17 — upstream FPF commit 646b0b9b (github.com/ailev/FPF)