A.19.SOURCE-SET-SPACE-SUBSTRATE:4.13 - Using the substrate with neighboring patterns
Preface node
heading:a-19-source-set-space-substrate-4-13-using-the-substrate-with-neighboring-patterns:24653
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
Once one substrate line is declared, use neighboring patterns in this order:
- Use
A.19.DECLARED-SUBSTRATE-INTERPRETIVE-VIEWwhen the next requirement is interpretive help over the same substrate. The interpretive view may foreground the line, but it does not become the ontology. - Use
G.2when that interpretation becomes palette-first, tradition-facing atlas work. Keep the base palette and the cited substrate recoverable while doing it. - Use
A.6.Pwhen one passage collapses source set, space ref, interpretive view, atlas view, or map/ref wording into one umbrella word. Repair the wording back to the substrate declaration before adding more theory. - Use
F.18when the problem is label choice or naming-side comparison around this stack. Naming notes may explain why one head is better named; they do not settle the substrate relation. - Use
A.0when the task is cold-reader glossing of these tokens. Glosses help recognition; they do not replace the declaration block.
If a neighboring passage would change the source-to-outcome relation or the distortion posture, reopen this pattern first. Neighboring text may reuse the substrate, but it may not silently rewrite it.
Last Updated: 2026-06-17 — upstream FPF commit 646b0b9b (github.com/ailev/FPF)