Khan only uses a handful of types, described below.
+avow
Thread result mold builder
|$ [a] (each a goof)
Khan returns this structure when the thread either successfully completes, or fails.
If the each is %.y, it succeeded and p contains the result in either a cage or a page. If the thread was run internally it's a cage, and if it was run externally it's a page.
If the each is %.n, the thread failed and p contains a goof, which is:
+$ goof [mote=term =tang]
The mote is an error code like %foobar and the tang contains something like a stack trace.
Example
> `(avow:khan cage)`[%.y %noun !>('foo')][%.y p=[p=%noun q=[#t/@t q=7.303.014]]]> `(avow:khan cage)`[%.n %foo-error 'blah' 'blah' ~][%.n p=[mote=%foo-error tang=~['blah' 'blah']]]
$bear
Thread location
$@(desk beak)
This is tells Khan where to look for a thread. It's either a desk or a full beak. Khan will look in the /ted directory of the specified location.
Example
> `bear:khan`%base%base> `bear:khan`[~sampel %base da+now][p=~sampel q=%base r=[%da p=~2022.11.6..08.33.22..9818]]
$cast
External thread argument
(pair mark page)
This is only used if you're running a thread via Khan's external interface. The mark specifies the output mark, and a page is a pair of input mark and raw noun.
Example
> `cast:khan`[%noun %noun 123][p=%noun q=[p=%noun q=123]]
+fyrd
Mold builder for a thread run request
|$ [a] [=bear name=term args=a]
The fields are:
- bear: thread location.
- name: thread name. Khan will look in- /tedfor this. If it's in a subdirectory like- /ted/foo/bar.hoon, you'd say- %foo-bar.
- args: a- cageif it's an internal request, and a- castif it's an external request.
Examples
> `(fyrd:khan cage)`[%base %mythread %noun !>(123)][bear=%base name=%mythread args=[p=%noun q=[#t/@ud q=123]]]> `(fyrd:khan cast:khan)`[%base %mythread %noun %noun 123][bear=%base name=%mythread args=[p=%noun q=[p=%noun q=123]]]