### The Pep/Nom documents folder This folder contains documentation about the *Nom* interpreted and compilable language and the [pep] Pattern Engine for parsing. *Nom* is a language with a syntax similar to "sed" https://www.gnu.org/software/sed/manual/sed.html but hopefully less cryptic than [sed] . Whereas *sed* matches and replaces "regular expression" wp://regular.expression patterns, *nom* recognises and transforms, translates or compiles context-free and context-sensitive text-patterns or languages. I keep a journal of mundane everyday work that I carry out on the pep/nom system at /doc/pepnom.doc.journal.html and I sometimes write more philosophical documents in a blog format in the "nomblog" /post/ There is a document about how you could help develop the nom system "here" /doc/pepnom.doc.help.html and there is a list of things that I need "to do" /doc/pepnom.doc.todo.html The folder /doc/commands/ contains information about each command in the nom language such as the nom://add command, the nom://push command and so on. The "command index" /doc/commands/doc.dir.index.html contains a list of commands and links to their documentation The folder /doc/syntax/ contains information about the syntax of the *nom* language, as it is defined in the nom compiler nomsf://compile.pss . The page file:///doc/syntax/doc.dir.index.html has a list of files in the syntax documentation. The folder /doc/machine/ contains documentation about the *pep* "virtual machine" pep://machine and each of its parts such as the pep://stack , the pep://tape and the pep://workspace buffer among others The example folder at /eg/ contains example nom scripts, each of which contain a header of documentation about what they do. The translation folder at /tr/ contains the nom scripts that can translate nom scripts into other languages such as [nom:translation.links] and each of those scripts also contains a documentation header explaining its function. A not very up-to-date list of the "documents" doc.dir.index.html in this folder is available. This website is also generated by the [nom] script /eg/text.tohtml.pss and the format of this "plain-text" is documented at /eg/text.tohtml.format.html . I hope some of this is of interest. Enjoy the Deniliquin Fig Tree below.