literate: create org/dirty.org as proof of literate programming workflow

org/dirty.org is now the source of truth for dirty.lisp and
dirty-tests.lisp. The process:
  Overview → Contract → Tests → Implement → Tangle → Test (GREEN)

Hand-written .lisp files were deleted and regenerated from org alone
to prove the pipeline works.
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Hermes Agent
2026-05-12 17:03:15 +00:00
parent 47094c48e5
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#+TITLE: Dirty Tracking
#+STARTUP: content
#+FILETAGS: :cl-tty:components:
* Overview
The dirty tracking module provides a mixin class and protocol for
marking components as needing re-render. This is the foundation of
the incremental rendering pipeline.
Without dirty tracking, every frame would re-render every component.
With it, only components that changed (and their ancestors, for layout
recomputation) get re-processed. The makes the difference between a
60fps terminal UI and a flickering mess.
This module is intentionally minimal: a single mixin class and two
generic functions. The complexity lives in the propagation logic
(see ~render.lisp~), but the dirty state itself is trivial.
* Contract
** ~dirty-mixin~
A class that adds a ~dirty~ slot. Components that need dirty tracking
inherit from this.
- ~(dirty-p component)~ — returns ~t~ if the component needs re-render,
~nil~ if it's up-to-date. New instances start dirty (~t~).
** ~mark-clean~
- ~(mark-clean component)~ — sets dirty to ~nil~. Called after rendering.
- Specialized on ~dirty-mixin~; default method is a no-op.
** ~mark-dirty~
- ~(mark-dirty component)~ — sets dirty to ~t~. Called when the component's
state changes (user typed a character, selection changed, etc.).
- Specialized on ~dirty-mixin~; default method is a no-op.
* Tests
#+BEGIN_SRC lisp :tangle ../src/components/dirty-tests.lisp
;; Dirty tracking tests are in box-tests.lisp (same test suite)
(in-package :cl-tty-box-test)
(in-suite box-suite)
(test dirty-mixin-default-is-dirty
"A dirty-mixin starts as dirty"
(let ((c (make-instance 'dirty-mixin)))
(is-true (dirty-p c) "new component should be dirty")))
(test mark-clean-clears-dirty
"mark-clean sets dirty to nil"
(let ((c (make-instance 'dirty-mixin)))
(mark-clean c)
(is-false (dirty-p c) "after mark-clean, should not be dirty")))
(test mark-dirty-sets-dirty
"mark-dirty sets dirty to t"
(let ((c (make-instance 'dirty-mixin)))
(mark-clean c)
(mark-dirty c)
(is-true (dirty-p c) "after mark-dirty, should be dirty again")))
#+END_SRC
* Implementation
The entire module is a class and two generic functions. The design
choice: make this a separate mixin rather than part of the base
~component~ class. This lets non-UI objects (layout nodes, render
commands) opt into dirty tracking without inheriting from component.
#+BEGIN_SRC lisp :tangle ../src/components/dirty.lisp
(in-package :cl-tty.box)
;; ── Dirty Tracking ─────────────────────────────────────────────
(defclass dirty-mixin ()
((dirty :initform t :accessor dirty-p)))
#+END_SRC
The ~initform t~ is critical: new components are dirty by default so
the first render pass doesn't skip them. If this default were ~nil~,
new components would be invisible until something explicitly marked
them dirty.
#+BEGIN_SRC lisp :tangle ../src/components/dirty.lisp
(defgeneric mark-clean (component)
(:method ((c dirty-mixin))
(setf (dirty-p c) nil)))
#+END_SRC
~mark-clean~ is called at the end of a render cycle. The default
method (for non-dirty-mixin components) is a no-op — they have no
dirty state to clear.
#+BEGIN_SRC lisp :tangle ../src/components/dirty.lisp
(defgeneric mark-dirty (component)
(:method ((c dirty-mixin))
(setf (dirty-p c) t)))
#+END_SRC
~mark-dirty~ is called whenever the component's visual state changes.
Together with ~propagate-dirty~ in the render pipeline, this ensures
that when a text input gains a character, not just the input component
but its containing box, tab, and screen all get re-rendered.
These are generic functions (not plain functions) so other mixins or
base classes can provide their own methods. The ~:method~ on
~dirty-mixin~ provides the default implementation for anything that
includes this mixin.