Simply breaking up the narrative into arbitrary chapters makes every chunk unsatisfying. The first chapter of a mystery is all Chekov guns.
Conversation
In creating "batches" (chapter-sized "releases") you have to create artificial 'episode arcs', cliffhangers and subplot wraps
4
2
You also have to keep the long-arc logic and momentum developing and not dissipating.
1
2
A truly complex narrative like a novel, if serialized, probably acquires additional 20-50% "batching" epicycles
1
2
My point: there is a tradeoff between batch size reduction and narrative serialization costs and a crossover line where former beats latter
3
1
This sounds the same as the programming debate around how small code modules should be. If too small, hard to reconstruct "code narrative"
2
2
Specifically, what are the characteristics of programming projects that are more like novels versus more like short stories?
1
functions fall on a spectrum between aphorisms and short stories. The actual program (collection of functions) is novel-like.
1
1
depending I guess on the linearity of the program. Some programs are very linear. Others not so much.
1
1
Libraries are very linear. Whole = sum of parts.
1
1
Is the dependency graph a good proxy for linearity?
Not really. It's how much like biology is the code. A simple transformation is like turning iron into steel where the internet is ~alive
1
1

