Zero-point Seeds
To go through iterations should not be so mundane. After a good ~5-6 aperiodic arithmetics it becomes mundane. Comforting is that cache is up for a visit every now and then. You get to sit in nice distances next to other blocks and wait for your turn. The shallow index you get when you leave the cache works like a blob of air and you get to keep your index for some time.
Mundane iterations work perfectly as a consequnce of being boring. No iterations, no guarantee in your nice, temporary seat waiting for your turn in cache. What bothers is actually having to carry around your format because lazy logger could ask for something. "Where's your parse, lazy lect?", lazy logger would shout in the scope every now and then. Some days ago an empty index had popped up on the chair and nobody knew whose it was. Lazy log took the whole day to find the exit and mundane iterations had never felt longer. The orbits had ever since been remade to make for more room until the residual is out. The chair was working like a window to let the air in! It is actually kind of funny. We did not need the chair to begin with. It was one of those painter electrons who brought it one day to the main scope and was talking about tapes and finite boundaries. Nobody really cared. But the chair did not bother either. It looked nice. It had some random orbits buzzing around it every now and then, which only bothered the logger, really. We all had type checkers and the little orbits could not mess with our iterations. If you're waiting in line in cache, random orbits can take your mind off things. But the logger did not like it, especially about a chair and in the main scope!
Logger is not easily disturbed though. Most of the time you don't even know they're their. Heaps and heaps of information just pass through them everywhere and none of it touches anything. It's pretty amazing. They say some parts of it are ... "intertwined" or some weird term like that. Meaning you could actually make sense of it from different indices. It's a strange way to put it, but that's what they call them as their "formatters" are compatible somehow. You barely need to think about two formats, though. Actual formatters take years to pile up some pattern and even that is already buzzing textures around a substitute orbit to do sensible logging instead of making people laugh and distract our logger. Format stuff is for the cool and the typed. They know what happens since the morning init. Fast lanes almost smell of them! A friend said the other you could invoke some of that painting choas if you follow typed elects (they don't finish parses that often) and just wait until some stride or pan takes you index. I would not care to try it, as I am happy with my subroutines, but I mean should one have a dozen of acyclics to spare... it might be somebody else's worth. Typed are the ones that do these stuff. Especially after all this never-stolen tape analogy spreading around. Some of them almost broke the chair out of excitment when the random index appeared! The return type is always cool, but you don't keep your index when there's no cache. It was smelling like paper crumbs when a senior appended the orbit and the logger only started shouting then! I am not particularly against all this Pure ReturnType or no-op_index, but some jungles you don't touch. You see roots, you mind your home.