generated from coulomb/repo-seed
One source → N co-equal derived projections (weave=docs, tangle=code); named-chunk transclusion; splits replication- vs derivation-projection. Generalizes compile-to-static (UC-79). Enriches UC-32/44/79; links UC-54. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
260614 — Literate Programming (Knuth's WEB / weave / tangle) deep dive
Date: 2026-06-14 · Source: SHARD-WP-0004 T1
What this is
A deep dive into literate programming — Knuth's WEB and the weave/tangle model
— as the deepest ancestor of shard-wiki's projection and transclusion ideas
applied to executable content. The keystone: one canonical source → two co-derived
projections (typeset docs via weave, compilable code via tangle), plus named code
chunks assembled by reference (transclusion).
Why it matters
- Establishes one-source-many-projections as a page-model + projection pattern that generalizes compile-to-static (UC-79, single output) to N co-equal, semantically different derived views — feeds SHARD-WP-0002 T12/T16.
- Splits projection into replication-projection (lazy cache, current default) vs derivation-projection (transform/compile/weave/evaluate) — a distinction the rest of the computational batch (notebooks, REPLs) extends.
- Named chunks are the executable-content face of transclusion / compose-by-reference (UC-32 / UC-44).
Yield
- UC-83 (new): attach a single-source-multiple-projection (literate) artifact; present each derived view with output→source provenance; edits target the source.
- Enrich UC-32, UC-44, UC-79; links UC-54 (computed/evaluated projection, → T3 Jupyter).
Contents
| Path | Role |
|---|---|
findings.md |
WEB model, named-chunk transclusion, descendants (noweb/org-babel/knitr/Jupytext), capability profile, INTENT mapping, UC seed, architecture notes, open questions |