The \pkgself~package exposes common and internal
defintions. Ideally, this package will be included automatically by
the compiler to remove repetitive, boilerplate imports. Importing
this package isn't necessary if none of these definitions are
needed.
\ref{_CMATCH_} is a magic constant that contains the result of
a~classification match. This is used implicity by
\ref{rate-each}.\footnote{The symbol is \Xi~because it looks like
a sideways array.}
\todo{Remove in favor of a local variable or generated
classification; there is no need (anymore) for this to be magic.}
The runtime is responsible for populating \ref{__DATE_YEAR__} with
a proper value representing the current year.
\todo{TAME is deterministic with this one exception; remove it and
have users use a param instead if they need this datum.}
Primitives are defined internally; these definitions simply
provide symbols to permit their use.
\ref{empty} does not have much use outside of the compiler.
$0$~is a~common value. Where a value is required (such
as a~template argument), \ref{ZERO} may be used. TAME now
supports a~constant-scalar syntax ({\tt #0}; \todo{reference this
in documentation}), making this largely unnecessary.
This is declared as a float to provide compatibility with all
types of expressions.
In the case where classifications are required, but a~static
assumption about the applicability of the subject can be made, we
have values that are always~true and always~false. The use
of~\ref{never} may very well be a~code smell, but let us not rush
to judgment.\footnote{\ref{never} has been added as an analog
to~\ref{always}; its author has never had use for it. Oh, look,
we just used ``never''.}
The templates in this section handle code that is
a~work-in-progress; they should probably not be used in production
code, since they indicate that something is incomplete or unused.
\ref{_todo_} formalizes TODO items and \may~always yield a scalar
integer~0, so it may be used within calculations. If yielding a
constant value is not appropriate, it \may~also be stripped from
the output entirely.
TODO
The \ref{_ignore_} template serves as a~block
comment.\footnote{This is useful since XML does not support nested
comments, which makes it difficult to comment out code that
already has XML comments.} It may be useful for debugging, but is
discouraged for use otherwise. The \ref{_ignore_/@desc@} param
should be used to describe intent.