Krpano Documentation -
Elara wasn't lost. She was trapped in an infinite loop, a onidle event that kept resetting the scene before she could exit.
For weeks, she explored. She used the <scene> tags as coordinates, the onstart events as wind in her sails. The documentation was her sacred text; she knew the control node allowed her to spin the very sky, and the plugin API could summon tools from thin air.
They sailed back together. Kael never coded without the documentation again. And in the library of Visua, they added a new rule to the wall: krpano documentation
They sent a rescue coder, a young man named Kael. He was cocky. "I don't need the docs," he said. "I’ll just use the default viewer."
But one day, her transmission went silent. The library’s curators received only a garbled string of XML: ERROR: out of memory . Elara wasn't lost
Kael wrote a new XML snippet, using the documentation as his grammar. He didn't guess the syntax; he knew it.
Her ship was a krpano viewer. Her map was the . She used the <scene> tags as coordinates, the
"The defaults aren't enough," he muttered.