Documentation - Krpano
Elara wasn't lost. She was trapped in an infinite loop, a onidle event that kept resetting the scene before she could exit.
<events onidle="delayedcall(0.1, removelayer(message));" /> He injected the code. The crystal cave shuddered. The frozen historian’s avatar blinked, then smiled. A text layer appeared, written in pure krpano logic:
In the sprawling digital library of Visua, there was a legend about a missing historian. Her name was Elara, and she had sailed deep into the "Spherical Sea"—a vast, interconnected archive of 360-degree worlds, from ancient ruins to distant planets. krpano documentation
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:
Desperate, he opened a floating window. It was the —but the "Search" bar was a bottomless pit. He typed: How to save a lost historian? Elara wasn't lost
Her ship was a krpano viewer. Her map was the .
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. The crystal cave shuddered
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."