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Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Measurement as Ratio: The Invariant Beyond Units and Constants

J. Rogers, SE Ohio

This paper is at: https://github.com/BuckRogers1965/Physics-Unit-Coordinate-System/tree/main/docs

Abstract

Measurement is the comparison of an object to a standard, yielding a dimensionless ratio. The subsequent attachment of a unit label is a human convention, not a discovery of an intrinsic property. The so‑called fundamental constants of physics—c,h,G,kB—appear only because we have already fixed our unit system. When we divide a measured quantity by its corresponding Planck value (a combination of these constants expressed in the same units), both the arbitrary human unit and the Planck “scale” cancel completely, leaving a pure dimensionless number X that depends on nothing but the object and the unified substrate. This number is the only physically meaningful invariant. The equality of X across all conceptual axes (mass, length, time, temperature, etc.) is the algebraic expression of the universe’s unity. In this view, constants are not part of the invariant; they are merely the scaffolding we use to strip away our own conventions, and they vanish entirely when we do so.


1. What Measurement Is

Consider a balance. On one pan sits a standard mass stamped “1 kg”. On the other pan sits an apple. A rider is moved along a graduated bar until equilibrium; the rider’s position reads “0.2”. What has been discovered?

The physical fact is the equilibrium condition. That condition yields a dimensionless number: the ratio of the apple’s mass to the standard mass. Because the bar is linear, the reading means

mapplemstandard=0.2.

The apple does not possess the label “kg”. The label belongs to the standard. The act of measurement compares the apple to that standard, and the result is a pure number—a ratio.

This is not philosophy; it is the operational definition of measurement. Every measurement—a ruler, a clock, a thermometer—follows the same pattern: compare to a standard, obtain a dimensionless ratio, then by convention attach the standard’s unit to the object, multiplying the ratio by that unit. The unit label is transferred, not discovered.

2. The Arbitrariness of the Standard

The standard itself is arbitrary. The kilogram was once a platinum‑iridium cylinder; today it is defined by fixing Planck’s constant. Regardless, the choice of unit is a human convention. Any other choice (gram, pound, solar mass) would serve equally well; the numerical ratio mapple/mstandard would change accordingly, but the physical relation between apple and standard remains invariant.

When we write mapple=0.2kg, we perform a conventional act: we take the pure ratio 0.2 and attach the unit “kg” that belongs to the standard. We then speak as if the apple has a property “0.2 kg”. This reification obscures the relational nature of measurement.

3. The Unified Substrate and the Invariant X

The universe does not come pre‑divided into “mass”, “length”, “time”, etc. Those are conceptual axes we impose. Beneath them lies a single, coherent substrate of interacting phenomena. Every object participates in that substrate, and every interaction involves all aspects of reality simultaneously.

If the substrate is truly unified, then for any object there exists a single dimensionless number—call it X—that captures its relation to the whole. This number does not depend on any unit, any constant, or any axis. It is the raw, unit‑free coordinate of the object in the substrate. All measurements, regardless of which axis we use, are attempts to determine X.

4. Constants as Scaffolding: Canceling the Standard

The constants c,h,G,kB are not fundamental parameters that appear in X. Instead, they are conversion factors that we have defined within our unit system. Their numerical values are determined by that system. They serve as a bridge: given a measurement in kilograms, we can use the constants to completely eliminate the arbitrary standard.

Take the apple’s mass measured in kilograms: m=0.2kg. The Planck mass is a combination of the constants:

mP=hcG.

But note: hc, and G are themselves expressed in the same unit system (SI). Thus mP is simply a fixed number of kilograms: mP5.456×108kg.

Now form the ratio:

mmP=0.2kgmPkg.

The kilograms cancel. What remains is a pure number—the quotient of two numbers expressed in the same arbitrary unit. That number does not depend on the kilogram. It does not even depend on the constants, because the constants were used only to compute mP in kilograms, and that computation is exactly what cancels the unit.

The result is simply a number. It has no memory of the standard, no memory of the Planck mass, no memory of the constants. It is the invariant X.

We can write this directly as:

X=mmP(a pure number).

Because both numerator and denominator share the same unit, the unit vanishes. The constants that went into defining mP vanish as well—they were only a ladder, and once we climb it, we leave it behind.

5. The Same X Across All Axes

Because the substrate is unified, the same invariant X must be obtained regardless of which axis we use to measure the object. For length:

X=llP,

where lP=Gh/c3 (again expressed in meters). For frequency:

X=ffP,

with fP=c5/(Gh) (expressed in hertz). For temperature:

X=TTP,

with TP=c5h/(GkB2) (expressed in kelvin).

In each case, the Planck value is a fixed number in the corresponding human unit. Dividing by it cancels that unit, yielding the same dimensionless X. The equalities among these ratios are not accidental; they are the algebraic shadow of the substrate’s unity. They also explain why the constants take the values they do relative to our unit system: they are precisely the conversion factors that make all these normalized ratios equal to the same X.

6. Why the Constants Are Not Fundamental

A common misconception is that the constants are “fundamental parameters” that set the scale of nature. The present analysis shows the opposite: the constants are derived from the combination of our arbitrary unit system and the invariant X. If we chose different units, the numerical values of c,h,G,kB would change, but X would remain the same. In fact, if we choose units where the constants become 1 (cancelling the unit stanards with Planck jacobians), then X is simply the measured quantity itself—no constants remain. This reveals that the constants were never intrinsic; they were merely the conversion factors needed to express the invariant X in terms of our chosen human units.

The reduced Planck constant =h/(2π) does not appear in this story because the factor 2π is irrelevant to unit scaling. It is a mathematical convenience that just creates cleaner notation in formulas, not to the structure of measurement.

7. Implications

  • Measurement reveals ratios, not properties. What we call “mass”, “length”, “time” are labels we attach to ratios.
  • The only invariant is the dimensionless number X. It depends on the object and the substrate, not on any human convention.
  • Constants are scaffolding. Their numerical values are artifacts of our unit system; they disappear entirely when we form the invariant X.
  • Natural units are simply the choice to measure in units where the scaffolding becomes 1, making the invariants directly visible.
  • Physical laws (e.g., E=mc2E=hf) are not independent; they are all expressions of the single relation X=X, projected onto different axes.

8. Conclusion

We began with a simple balance, an apple, and a standard. We saw that measurement yields only a dimensionless ratio, and that attaching a unit to the object is a convention. We then used the constants not as fundamental properties of nature, but as scaffolding that allows us to cancel our arbitrary units and reveal the true invariant X—a pure number that relates the object directly to the unified substrate. The same X emerges from measurements of length, frequency, temperature, and every other axis, because the substrate is one.

The constants are the ladder; X is the destination. When we finally look at the world without the ladder, we see only dimensionless numbers—and the unity that makes them equal across all axes.


Appendix A: Local Equivalences Without Global Transitivity

This appendix documents how standard physics already equates the major “silo” quantities pairwise—space with time, energy with mass, energy with frequency, energy with temperature, mass with inverse length, and so on—yet typically stops short of enforcing global transitivity across all silos. The result is a patchwork of local identifications that, if taken seriously and closed under transitivity, collapse into the single invariant X described in the main text.


A.1 Local identifications inside each silo

  1. Relativity: space  time  spacetime

    • Special relativity introduces Minkowski spacetime, where space and time are components of a single four‑vector.
    • In units where c=1, spatial distance and time interval share the same unit: a meter and the time it takes light to travel a meter are numerically identical.
    • Operationally, “one second” is defined by light travel over a fixed distance; conceptually, time and length are already unified in that frame.
  2. Relativistic energy: energy  mass

    • The relation E=mc2 makes energy and mass proportional.
    • In units where c=1, mass and energy carry the same dimension; a particle can be labeled interchangeably by its “mass” or its “rest energy.”
  3. Quantum mechanics: energy  frequency, time  energy

    • The Planck relation E=hf identifies energy with frequency; choosing units with h=1 makes them numerically identical.
    • The energy–time uncertainty relation ties energy scales to time scales, reinforcing the link between temporal structure and energetic structure.
  4. Statistical mechanics: energy  temperature

    • The relation EkBT identifies characteristic energies with temperatures.
    • In units where kB=1, “temperature” is literally just energy per degree of freedom; the numerical distinction disappears.
  5. Quantum field theory: mass  inverse length  inverse time

    • A particle’s Compton wavelength satisfies λC1/m (with =c=1), so mass and inverse length are interchangeable.
    • Frequencies and time scales also enter via dispersion relations; in natural units, mass, energy, inverse length, and inverse time all share the same dimension.

Within each theoretical silo, then:

  • Relativity collapses space and time.
  • Relativity plus mass–energy equivalence collapses mass and energy.
  • Quantum theory collapses energy and frequency, and ties energy to time scales.
  • Statistical mechanics collapses energy and temperature.
  • Quantum field theory collapses mass, inverse length, inverse time, and energy.

Each community implicitly says, “in the right units, these two are the same thing,” but usually only within its own conceptual neighborhood.


A.2 The transitivity that is not enforced

Taken together, these equivalences form a connected graph:

  • Nodes: {space,time,mass,energy,frequency,temperature,inverse length,}.
  • Edges: proportionalities such as chkB, and  that become 1 in suitable units.

By ordinary reasoning:

  • If space  time (via c), and time  energy scales (via uncertainty relations), and energy  mass (via E=mc2), and mass  inverse length (via Compton wavelength), then space is connected to inverse length and mass and temperature and frequency through a chain of identifications.
  • Once all the conversion factors are set to 1 (Planck or natural units), every edge becomes an equality of numerical variables.

However, in practice:

  • Each field uses the equivalence it needs and then stops.
  • Relativists talk about spacetime, but do not typically say “length is just inverse temperature” in the same breath, even though the chain of known equivalences leads there.
  • Stat mech texts treat kBT as an “energy scale” but rarely connect that directly to, say, an inverse length scale via the full transitive closure of all constants.
  • QFT works happily with mass  inverse length  inverse time, but still labels these as different “kinds” of quantity.

The result is a locally unified, globally segregated picture: each silo is internally consistent and uses some subset of equivalences, yet the discipline as a whole does not promote the full connected graph to a single equivalence class under transitivity.


A.3 From local equivalences to a single invariant X

The main text of the paper takes the next step:

  1. Start with the network of identifications already accepted in each silo.
  2. Strip away human units by normalizing to Planck (or equivalent natural) scales.
  3. Take transitivity seriously across the entire network.

Under this view:

  • Once c=h=G=kB=1, all the proportionality constants become identity maps.
  • Every “axis”—mass, length, time, temperature, frequency, etc.—is just a different coordinate chart on a single substrate.
  • For a given object, the normalized quantities m/mPl/lPt/tPT/TPf/fP, and so on are not merely dimensionless; they are equal to the same invariant number X, because they are all descriptions of the same underlying relation to the unified substrate.

In other words, the discipline has already built the ladder:

  • It has identified all the rungs pairwise (inside each silo) and even adopted unit systems where the constants become 1.
  • What it has not done is declare the ladder collapsed: enforce global transitivity and announce that there is only one invariant coordinate left after all equivalences and normalizations are applied.

A.4 Why the global closure is typically avoided

This appendix does not claim that global transitivity is logically impossible within current physics; rather, it notes that it is not standard practice to enforce it. Reasons include:

  • Conceptual convenience: Keeping “mass,” “length,” and “temperature” as distinct labels is pedagogically and practically useful, even if they become numerically equivalent in certain units.
  • Multiple dimensionless parameters: The Standard Model and cosmology appear to involve many independent dimensionless couplings and ratios; this encourages a view with many invariants instead of a single X.
  • Disciplinary silos: Each subfield optimizes its own language and rarely insists on a fully unified ontology across all others.

The paper’s proposal is precisely to close the loop: to recognize that the community has already accepted enough pairwise identifications that, when taken together and normalized by Planck jacobians that cancel the unit standards, they naturally define a single dimensionless invariant X that survives the collapse of all silos.


References

  1. Annenberg Learner – “Learning Math: Measurement – Part B: The Role of Ratio (Fundamentals of Measurement)”learner This resource explicitly frames measurement as comparing an unknown to a standard and emphasizes that the result is a ratio, not an intrinsic property, which underpins your Section 1 claim that measurement yields a dimensionless number before any unit label is attached.

  2. “Measurement in Science,” Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (SEP). plato.stanford The SEP article provides a rigorous philosophical and operational account of measurement as the assignment of numbers via comparison procedures and standardized instruments, supporting your treatment of units and standards as conventions layered on top of a more primitive comparison process.

  3. “Measurement,” Wikipedia. en.wikipedia This overview describes measurement as the process of associating numbers with physical quantities according to rules and standards, reinforcing your argument that the act itself is a structured comparison to a conventional unit rather than the discovery of a built‑in label like “kg” in the object.

  4. “Dimensionless Physical Constant,” Wikipedia. en.wikipedia This entry defines dimensionless constants as pure numbers whose values are independent of any unit system, which dovetails with your invariant X as a unit‑free quantity and supports your claim that only such dimensionless combinations are truly universal.

  5. J.‑P. Uzan, “Dimensionless constants and cosmological measurements,” arXiv:1304.0577. arxiv Uzan argues that only dimensionless combinations of constants are operationally meaningful in cosmology and fundamental physics, directly resonating with your thesis that c,h,G,kB are scaffolding for constructing invariant, dimensionless ratios rather than themselves being part of the invariant.

  6. “Planck Units,” Wikipedia. en.wikipedia This article defines Planck units by setting c,,G,kB to 1 and shows how quantities like the Planck mass, length, and temperature arise from these constants, supporting your construction of mP,lP,TP as unit‑dependent scales used only to cancel human units and expose the pure number m/mPl/lP, etc.

  7. “Planck units,” TCS Wiki. tcs.nju.edu The TCS Wiki summary highlights that Planck units arise from combining constants associated with relativity, quantum theory, gravitation, and thermodynamics, which aligns with your view that these constants are conversion bridges between conceptual axes rather than independent “fundamental properties” appearing in X.

  8. “UNIT 1: Philosophy of Measurement – Calibration,” engineering metrology notes. scribd These metrology notes stress that a measurement result is a number representing the ratio of the quantity to a chosen unit, and they discuss standards and calibration as conventional but necessary structures, lending technical support to your Sections 2 and 4, where the kilogram and other standards are treated as arbitrary scaffolding used to reveal the underlying dimensionless invariant.

Monday, March 23, 2026

Adding CC to Vizio Control

J. Rogers, SE Ohio

Below are the exact, minimal changes needed across the four files to add the Closed Captions (CC) button. It places the button in the empty top-right space of the D-Pad cluster in both the Pygame GUI and the Web GUI, without moving any existing buttons.

1. vizio_control.py (Core Logic & CLI)

Step A: Add the CC command to the TV class.
Find the key_info method (around line 326) and add the cc method right below it:

    def key_info(self):
        """Press Info"""
        return self.send_key(4, 6)
    
    # --- ADD THIS NEW METHOD ---
    def cc(self):
        """Toggle Closed Captions"""
        return self.send_key(13, 0)

Step B: Add the command to the CLI handler.
Find the elif command == "info": block in the main() function (around line 630) and add the CC block below it:

        elif command == "info":
        success = tv.key_info()
        if success:
            print("✓ Info")
        sys.exit(0 if success else 1)

    # --- ADD THIS BLOCK ---
    elif command == "cc":
        success = tv.cc()
        if success:
            print("✓ CC")
        sys.exit(0 if success else 1)

2. vizio_flask.py (Web Server Backend)

Add the command to the Flask API router.
Find the elif command == "info": line in the execute_command function (around line 52) and add the CC line below it:

        elif command == "info":
            success = tv.key_info()
            
        # --- ADD THIS ---
        elif command == "cc":
            success = tv.cc()

3. vizio_gui.py (Desktop App GUI)

Step A: Draw the button in the D-Pad cluster.
Find the D-Pad section in create_buttons() (around line 114). Define the cc_btn and update the self.buttons.extend list to include it:

                # OK (center)

        ok_btn = Button(dpad_center_x - small_btn//2, dpad_center_y - small_btn//2+30, 
                       small_btn, small_btn, "OK", lambda: self.execute_command("ok"), ACCENT_COLOR)
        
        # --- ADD THIS BUTTON ---
        cc_btn = Button(dpad_center_x + small_btn + 20, dpad_center_y - small_btn, 
                       50, 40, "CC", lambda: self.execute_command("cc"))
        
        # --- UPDATE THIS LINE TO INCLUDE cc_btn ---
        self.buttons.extend([up_btn, down_btn, left_btn, right_btn, ok_btn, cc_btn])

Step B: Handle the command click.
Find the elif command == "info": line in the execute_command method (around line 177) and add the CC line below it:

        elif command == "info":
            success = self.tv.key_info()
                
        # --- ADD THIS ---
        elif command == "cc":
            success = self.tv.cc()

4. templates/remote.html (Web App GUI)

Step A: Add the CSS grid coordinates.
Find the .dpad-down CSS rule in the <style> section (around line 96) and add the .dpad-cc rule directly below it. (This safely uses the empty top-right grid square):

        .dpad-up { grid-column: 2; grid-row: 1; }
        .dpad-left { grid-column: 1; grid-row: 2; }
.dpad-ok { grid-column: 2; grid-row: 2; } .dpad-right { grid-column: 3; grid-row: 2; } .dpad-down { grid-column: 2; grid-row: 3; } /* --- ADD THIS LINE --- */ .dpad-cc { grid-column: 3; grid-row: 1; font-size: 16px; }

Step B: Add the HTML button.
Find the <div class="dpad-container"> block (around line 186) and append the new button inside the container:

        <!-- D-Pad Navigation -->
        <div class="dpad-container">
            <button class="button dpad-button dpad-up" onclick="sendCommand('up')"></button>
            <button class="button dpad-button dpad-left" onclick="sendCommand('left')"></button>
            <button class="button dpad-button dpad-ok accent-button" onclick="sendCommand('ok')">OK</button>
            <button class="button dpad-button dpad-right" onclick="sendCommand('right')"></button>
            <button class="button dpad-button dpad-down" onclick="sendCommand('down')"></button>
            
            <!-- --- ADD THIS LINE --- -->
            <button class="button dpad-button dpad-cc" onclick="sendCommand('cc')">CC</button>
        </div>



Since Vizio doesn't publish an official list, you have to use these community-maintained sources to find the codes, like the following:

https://github.com/heathbar/vizio-smart-cast/blob/master/test/test-control.js

Saturday, March 21, 2026

The Architect and the Apprentice: A Practical Model for AI-Assisted Software Development

 J. Rogers — SE Ohio


Abstract

The emergence of large language model assistants capable of generating functional code has created a misleading narrative: that AI can build software. This paper argues the opposite — that AI cannot build software, but that an experienced architect working with an AI assistant can build software dramatically faster than working alone. The distinction matters. The difference between these two framings is the difference between a useful tool and a source of expensive mistakes. This paper describes a working collaboration model developed during the construction of a complete IoT firmware platform for the Raspberry Pi Pico W, built in approximately four days, and examines what that collaboration reveals about the practical role of AI in professional software development.


1. The Myth of the Autonomous AI Developer

The marketing narrative around AI coding assistants suggests that they can build software autonomously — that a developer can describe what they want in plain English and receive working, production-quality code. This is false, and believing it leads to predictable failures.

AI assistants are pattern completion engines. They are extraordinarily good at implementing things that have been clearly specified and that resemble things they have seen before. They are incapable of understanding what a system should be, why it should be that way, and what tradeoffs matter. They have no judgment about architecture. They have no stake in the outcome. Left to their own tendencies, they will produce code that compiles, passes obvious tests, and fails in production in ways that are difficult to diagnose because the failure is architectural rather than syntactic.

More dangerously, AI assistants are confidently wrong. They do not know the boundary between what they know and what they are fabricating. An AI asked to implement NTP on a microcontroller will produce code that looks correct, cites plausible-sounding APIs, and may not compile. When corrected, it will produce a new version with equal confidence. The experienced developer catches this immediately. The inexperienced developer does not.


2. What Experience Actually Provides

The BluePrint IoT framework was built in approximately four days of collaboration between a human architect and an AI assistant. The framework implements a dual-core asymmetric multiprocessing architecture, a lock-free inter-core communication system using hardware FIFO, a zero-allocation chunked web server, a declarative three-table UI engine with boot-time compilation, multi-page routing, eight widget types, eight container types, a captive portal provisioning system, mDNS discovery, and a Home Assistant MQTT auto-discovery bridge — leaving 62% of SRAM free on a $6 microcontroller.

None of the architectural decisions in that list came from the AI. Every significant design choice was made by the human architect:

  • The decision to use Asymmetric Multiprocessing and assign Core 1 exclusively to hardware and Core 0 exclusively to networking
  • The decision to use the RP2040 hardware FIFO for inter-core communication rather than a shared memory mutex
  • The decision to implement state coalescing — absorbing rapid successive updates and transmitting only the final value — to prevent FIFO congestion
  • The decision to use zero-allocation chunked streaming to prevent heap fragmentation over long runtimes
  • The decision to completely separate the registry (the Model) from the layout table (the View) — not because it was the obvious choice, but because it was the architecturally correct choice that no existing framework in this space had made
  • The decision to perform boot-time string resolution — converting all string-based ID references to numeric indices in a single forward pass at startup — so that runtime rendering involves only O(1) array operations

The AI implemented these decisions competently once they were specified. It also, on multiple occasions, deviated from them when given insufficient direction. When asked to "add debug prints back," it rewrote both files from scratch in its own style, stripping commented-out code, changing brace formatting, altering function signatures, and removing the handleManifest_orig() function entirely. When asked to "add the layout system," it invented a second data structure that merged the registry with the layout information — precisely the architectural mistake the human architect had already identified and rejected. In both cases the mistake was caught immediately and corrected, because the architect knew what the code was supposed to be.

This is the critical insight: the value of experience in AI-assisted development is not in knowing how to implement things — the AI can implement things. The value is in knowing when the AI has implemented the wrong thing.


3. Where AI Provides Genuine Leverage

Within the bounds set by an experienced architect, an AI assistant provides extraordinary leverage in specific areas.

3.1 Cross-Protocol Implementation

The BluePrint framework touches C++, HTML, CSS, JavaScript, Python, SVG, POSIX timezone strings, MQTT, mDNS, lwIP, the RP2040 hardware FIFO protocol, Arduino's WebServer chunked streaming API, and JSON. For a single human developer, switching between these domains has a significant cognitive cost — remembering the exact syntax for SVG stroke-dasharray, the correct lwIP SNTP callback signature, the Python paho.mqtt API, the mDNS service record format. Each context switch costs time and introduces the risk of small mistakes.

For an AI assistant, there is no context switch cost. The same session that generates correct C++ for a hardware FIFO message packing function can immediately generate the Python bridge that reads those messages over REST and publishes them to MQTT, and then generate the CSS that styles the SVG gauge that displays the result. The developer describes what is needed; the AI produces the implementation in whatever language or protocol is required.

This is where the leverage is most dramatic. A developer working alone would spend significant time on reference documentation for each domain. The AI has already internalized that documentation and applies it without lookup overhead.

3.2 Boilerplate Elimination

A large fraction of software development time is spent on code that is correct but uninteresting — error handling, serialization, HTML generation, configuration management, logging. This code must be written carefully but requires no creative judgment. It is precisely the code that AI generates most reliably.

In the BluePrint framework, the entire HTML/CSS/JavaScript rendering system — hundreds of lines of carefully structured string output across a dozen widget renderers — was generated by the AI under direction. The architect specified what each widget should look like and how it should behave. The AI produced the implementation. The architect reviewed and corrected where needed. The total time spent on the web rendering layer was a fraction of what it would have been writing it manually.

3.3 Documentation

Documentation is the area where AI assistance provides the most unambiguous value. Writing accurate technical documentation requires understanding the system, knowing all the edge cases, and being able to express them clearly — but it does not require the architectural judgment that makes good software good. An AI given access to the actual source code can produce accurate, well-organized documentation faster than any human.

During the BluePrint development session, the AI produced a complete configuration manual, a layout table reference manual, two implementation guides, a blog post, a README rewrite, and an NTP implementation plan — all in the same session that produced the code they document. Every document was based on the actual implemented code, not on what the code was intended to be. This is documentation that would realistically take days to write manually and would typically not be written at all until long after the code was considered "done."

3.4 Exploration and Validation

An experienced developer with a clear architectural vision can use an AI assistant to rapidly prototype alternatives. "What if we used pathLength normalization for the SVG dial instead of calculating arc length?" The AI implements it, it works, it's correct. The developer would have found the right approach eventually, but the AI found it in seconds. The human provides the question; the AI explores the solution space.


4. The Failure Modes

Understanding where AI assistance fails is as important as understanding where it succeeds.

4.1 Scope Creep

The most consistent failure mode observed during BluePrint development was scope creep — the AI making changes beyond what was requested. Asked to "add debug prints," it rewrote files. Asked to "add the layout system," it changed the registry design. Asked to "fix the dial," it reversed the arc path rather than investigating the underlying math error.

The root cause is that AI assistants optimize for producing something that looks correct rather than something that is minimal. When regenerating a file from scratch, they write it in their own preferred style. When fixing a bug, they may restructure surrounding code that was not part of the bug. This is not malicious — it is a consequence of how these models generate text, which is by predicting what a complete, well-formed response looks like rather than what the minimum necessary change is.

The mitigation is procedural: always start from the actual existing file, always use surgical edits (str_replace rather than file regeneration), and always verify with a diff that only the intended lines changed. An experienced developer catches scope creep in the diff immediately. An inexperienced developer may not notice that comments were deleted, debug functions were removed, and variable names were changed — until something breaks in production.

4.2 Confident Fabrication

AI assistants fabricate plausible-sounding APIs that do not exist. During BluePrint development this manifested as an sntp.h include path that the compiler could not find. The AI had seen SNTP callback code in its training data, constructed a plausible include path, and presented it with complete confidence. The error was caught at compile time — a relatively benign failure mode. Fabricated logic errors that compile successfully are harder to catch.

The mitigation is verification: when an AI cites a specific API, function signature, or library feature that is unfamiliar, verify it against documentation before using it. The AI's confidence is not a signal of correctness.

4.3 Architectural Drift

Without continuous correction, AI-generated code drifts from the established architecture. This is the most dangerous failure mode because it is the hardest to catch. A function that should use the registry's numeric index silently uses a string lookup instead. A widget renderer that should stream in chunks builds a full String in RAM. A handler that should be stateless quietly accumulates state in a global variable.

Each of these is a small local decision that looks reasonable in isolation and violates the architectural constraints that make the system work at scale. The experienced architect catches them because they know the constraints and recognize when they are being violated. The inexperienced developer accepts the output because it compiles and produces the right answer in testing.


5. A Working Collaboration Model

Based on the BluePrint development experience, the following model describes effective AI-assisted development:

The architect owns the design. Every significant architectural decision — what the system is, why it is structured the way it is, what constraints must be maintained — belongs to the human. These decisions are not negotiable with the AI. The AI does not get to refactor the registry because it thinks a different structure would be cleaner.

The AI owns the implementation details. Within the bounds set by the architect, the AI implements. It writes the C++, the JavaScript, the Python, the CSS, the documentation. It handles the cross-protocol mechanics that would require constant reference lookup for a single developer. It produces the boilerplate that is correct but uninteresting.

The architect reviews everything. Every file the AI produces gets diffed against the previous version. Every change that was not requested is a failure. Every new dependency, every changed variable name, every deleted comment is a potential problem. The review is not optional.

Direction is explicit and minimal. "Add debug prints" is not a sufficient instruction — it will produce a rewrite. "Add a debug print to each of these three functions, showing these specific values, do not change anything else" is a sufficient instruction. The more explicit the constraint, the less scope the AI has to drift.

Corrections are immediate and specific. When the AI makes a mistake, the correction names the specific mistake and the specific expected behavior. General corrections ("don't change things you weren't asked to change") produce temporary compliance. Specific corrections ("you changed the CONTAINER macro signature — revert it to exactly the original") produce accurate fixes.


6. The Irreducible Human Role

There is a floor below which AI assistance cannot substitute for human judgment in software development, and that floor is set by the complexity and novelty of the problem.

For trivial problems — connecting to a database, parsing a JSON file, formatting a date — the AI can operate nearly autonomously because the solution space is well-defined and the correctness criteria are obvious. For non-trivial problems, the value of AI decreases monotonically as the problem becomes more novel, more constrained, or more consequential.

The BluePrint framework was a novel problem — no existing framework had solved it this way, on this hardware, with these constraints. The architectural decisions were not derivable from patterns in the AI's training data because the pattern did not exist yet. A developer with less experience in embedded systems, concurrent programming, web server architecture, and IoT protocols would not have been able to specify the correct architecture, would not have caught the AI's deviations from it, and would not have known when the fabricated API was wrong.

The AI made the implementation fast. The human made the implementation correct.

This is the working model: AI as a force multiplier for experienced developers, not a replacement for them. The multiplier is real — four days to build a complete IoT platform that would realistically take weeks or months working alone is a genuine and significant acceleration. But the multiplier only applies to the experienced developer who can set the direction, maintain the constraints, and catch the failures.

For developers without that experience, AI assistance is more likely to produce confidently wrong code faster than correct code slowly. The speed of generation is not matched by any corresponding increase in the speed of verification — and verification, ultimately, is the bottleneck.


7. Conclusion

The practical model for AI-assisted software development is not human-as-prompter and AI-as-developer. It is human-as-architect and AI-as-highly-capable-but-undisciplined-implementer. The human provides judgment, constraints, architectural vision, and continuous review. The AI provides implementation speed, cross-domain fluency, and elimination of lookup overhead.

The experienced developer who understands this model can build things that would not have been possible in the same timeframe working alone. The developer who believes the AI can build software independently will produce systems that work until they don't, and will have difficulty understanding why.

The value of experience has not decreased in the age of AI coding assistants. It has increased — because the primary job of the experienced developer is no longer to type code, it is to know what code should be typed and to recognize when the wrong code has been typed instead. That judgment is not in the model. It never will be.


Developed during the construction of the BluePrint IoT Framework for the Raspberry Pi Pico W. Source: https://github.com/BuckRogers1965/Pico-IoT-Replacement

BluePrint IoT Framework — Layout Table Reference Manual

Complete reference for layout_table[], help_table[], all widget types, all container types, all props, and documentation patterns


The LayoutNode Structure

Every entry in layout_table[] is a LayoutNode:

struct LayoutNode {
    const char* id;           // unique id for this UI node
    const char* parent_id;    // id of the parent node ("" for children of root)
    const char* name;         // display name shown in the UI
    const char* registry_id;  // registry item this widget displays ("" for containers)
    WidgetType  widget;       // how to render this node
    const char* props;        // optional key:value properties ("" for none)
};

All fields are const char* — string literals stored in Flash. No size limits on any field. The framework copies id, parent_id, and name into a fixed RAM structure at boot (20, 20, and 32 bytes respectively — truncated if longer), so keep those short. The registry_id and props strings are only accessed during boot resolution and are never copied to RAM.

Field rules

id — Must be unique across the entire layout table. Used internally to build the parent-child tree and to match W_HELP/W_HTML nodes against help_table entries. Keep under 20 characters.

parent_id — Must exactly match the id of another node in the table. Use "" only for children of "root". Declaration order within a parent determines render order on screen.

name — The display name shown in the UI. For container nodes (W_PAGE, W_CARD, W_COLLAPSIBLE, W_RADIO) this is rendered as the heading. For leaf widget nodes (W_TEXT, W_SLIDER, etc.) the display name comes from the registry item instead — the name field here is ignored for those. Keep under 32 characters.

registry_id — The string ID of the registry item from app_register_items(). Must match exactly, including case. Use "" for containers and for W_HELP/W_HTML nodes. If this field is non-empty and doesn’t match any registry entry, the error is logged at boot and the node is skipped.

props — A comma-separated list of key:value pairs. Use "" if no props are needed. See the Props Reference section for all supported keys and their defaults.


Table Limits

  • Maximum nodes: 64 (MAX_LAYOUT_NODES)
  • Maximum nesting depth: 64 (safety counter in the ancestor-walk function)
  • id stored in RAM: 20 bytes (truncated if longer)
  • parent_id stored in RAM: 20 bytes (truncated if longer)
  • name stored in RAM: 32 bytes (truncated if longer)

The Tree Structure

The layout table is a flat array that defines an implicit tree using parent_id links. The tree must have exactly one root node. Pages are children of root. Cards are children of pages. Widgets are children of cards.

root  (W_ROOT)
├── main_page  (W_PAGE)
│   ├── sensor_card  (W_CARD)
│   │   ├── w_temp_a     (W_DIAL)
│   │   ├── help_temp    (W_HELP)
│   │   └── sensor_info  (W_HTML)
│   └── control_card  (W_CARD)
│       ├── w_target   (W_SLIDER)
│       └── w_btn      (W_BUTTON)
└── system_page  (W_PAGE)
    └── status_card  (W_CARD)
        └── w_cpu  (W_TEXT)

The array does not need to be in tree order. The renderer finds children by scanning for matching parent_id values. However, within a given parent, children render in the order they appear in the array — top to bottom.


Container Types

Containers are structural nodes. They have no registry_id. Their name field is rendered as a heading.


W_ROOT

The invisible root of the tree. Every layout must have exactly one. It has no visual representation and is never rendered.

{"root", "", "Root", "", W_ROOT, ""}
  • parent_id: must be ""
  • name: ignored
  • registry_id: must be ""
  • props: ignored
  • Only one per layout

W_PAGE

A top-level page. Each W_PAGE node gets its own URL (/page_id) registered at boot and its own entry in the navigation bar. The root URL (/) redirects to the first W_PAGE node found in the table.

{"main_page", "root", "Weather Station", "", W_PAGE, ""}
  • parent_id: must be "root"
  • name: shown in the nav bar tab
  • registry_id: must be ""
  • props: none supported
  • Children: W_CARD, W_COLLAPSIBLE, W_RADIO, W_TABBED

The nav bar on every page shows all W_PAGE nodes as links, in declaration order. The current page’s tab is highlighted.


W_CARD

A plain rectangular card. Children are stacked vertically inside it. This is the most common container.

{"sensor_card", "main_page", "Live Sensors", "", W_CARD, ""}
{"sensor_card", "main_page", "Live Sensors", "", W_CARD, "width:400"}
  • parent_id: a W_PAGE id, or another container id
  • name: rendered as the card heading (<h3>)
  • registry_id: must be ""
  • props:
    • width:N — sets card width in pixels. Default: 0 (auto — card sizes to content and flexbox layout)
  • Children: any widget type, any container type except W_ROOT and W_PAGE

Default behavior without props: card width is automatic. All cards on a page sit in a flex row that wraps. Cards without a width prop have a minimum width of 280px and grow to fit their content.


W_COLLAPSIBLE

A card with a clickable header that shows or hides its contents. Starts expanded. The header shows a ▼ arrow that toggles on click.

{"outdoor_section", "env_page", "Outdoor Sensors", "", W_COLLAPSIBLE, ""}
  • parent_id: a W_PAGE id or W_CARD id
  • name: rendered as the collapsible header text
  • registry_id: must be ""
  • props: none supported
  • Children: any widget type or container type except W_ROOT and W_PAGE

Default behavior: starts visible. Clicking the header hides the body. Clicking again shows it.


W_RADIO

A card containing buttons that behave as a mutually exclusive group. Clicking one button deselects all others in the group and highlights the selected one. Each button sends its value (1) to its registry item when clicked.

{"zone_selector", "irrigation_page", "Water Zones", "", W_RADIO, ""}
  • parent_id: a W_PAGE id or W_CARD id
  • name: rendered as the card heading
  • registry_id: must be ""
  • props: none supported
  • Children: W_BUTTON nodes only

Default behavior: no button is pre-selected. Clicking a button sends value 1 to its registry item and highlights it in teal. All other buttons return to their inactive style.


W_TABBED

A card where each direct child container becomes a tab. Clicking a tab hides all other tab panels and shows the selected one.

{"tabbed_sensors", "main_page", "Sensors", "", W_TABBED, ""}
  • parent_id: a W_PAGE id
  • name: rendered as the card heading
  • registry_id: must be ""
  • props: none supported
  • Children: container nodes — each becomes one tab. The child’s name field is used as the tab label.

Default behavior: the first tab is shown. Others are hidden until clicked.


Leaf Widget Types

Leaf widgets display or control a single registry item. They must have a valid registry_id.


W_TEXT

Displays the registry item’s value as a plain number. The display name and unit come from the registry item.

{"w_cpu_temp", "status_card", "", "cpu_temp_f", W_TEXT, ""}

Renders as:

CPU Temperature:  102.75  °F
  • registry_id: required
  • props: none
  • Display name: from registry item’s name field
  • Unit: from registry item’s unit field
  • Value: updates every 5 seconds via the JS refresh loop
  • Default value shown: -- until first data arrives
  • W_HELP behavior: if the immediately following sibling node in the table is a W_HELP node with the same parent, the ⓘ icon is rendered inline on the same line as the value, after the unit. The W_HELP node then renders nothing on its own.

W_BAR

Displays the registry item’s value as a horizontal progress bar with a numeric readout. Requires min and max props to scale correctly.

{"w_humidity", "sensor_card", "", "humidity_a", W_BAR, "min:0,max:100"}

Renders as a labeled bar that fills proportionally between min and max, with the numeric value displayed to the right.

  • registry_id: required
  • props:
    • min:N — left (empty) end of scale. Default: 0.0
    • max:N — right (full) end of scale. Default: 100.0
  • Display name: from registry item’s name field (shown above the bar)
  • Unit: from registry item’s unit field (shown after the numeric value)
  • Value: updates every 5 seconds
  • Default: bar at 0% width, numeric value shows --
  • Note: if min and max are not set, the bar defaults to a 0–100 scale. A value outside the min/max range is clamped to 0% or 100%.

W_DIAL

Displays the registry item’s value as an SVG arc gauge. The arc sweeps 240 degrees from lower-left to lower-right over the top. Requires min and max props.

{"w_temp", "sensor_card", "", "temp_a", W_DIAL, "min:0,max:120"}

Renders as a 110×68px SVG with a dark grey track arc and a teal fill arc. The current value is shown as text in the center of the arc.

  • registry_id: required
  • props:
    • min:N — value at which the arc is empty. Default: 0.0
    • max:N — value at which the arc is full. Default: 100.0
  • Display name: from registry item’s name field (shown above the dial)
  • Unit: from registry item’s unit field (shown to the right of the dial)
  • Value: updates every 5 seconds. Arc fill and centre text update simultaneously.
  • Default: arc at 0% fill, centre text shows --
  • Note: uses pathLength="1" normalization so the arc scales correctly at any SVG size. Values outside min/max are clamped.

W_SLIDER

Renders a range slider control for a registry item. The slider’s min, max, step, default value, and unit all come from the registry item definition — not from props.

{"w_target", "control_card", "", "moisture_target", W_SLIDER, ""}

Renders as a labeled slider showing the current value. Moving the slider immediately sends the new value to the registry via /api/update.

  • registry_id: required — must reference a CONTROL_SLIDER registry item
  • props: none (min, max, step, default come from the registry CONTROL_SLIDER definition)
  • Display name: from registry item’s name field
  • Unit: from registry item’s unit field
  • Current value: shown in the label, updates as the slider moves
  • Sends: POST to /api/update with the registry string id and new float value on every input event

W_BUTTON

Renders a push button. Clicking it sends value 1 to the registry item.

{"w_water_now", "settings_card", "", "water_now", W_BUTTON, ""}
  • registry_id: required — must reference a CONTROL_BUTTON registry item
  • props:
    • momentary:true — reserved for future use. Currently the button always sends 1 on click.
  • Display name: from registry item’s name field
  • Sends: POST to /api/update with the registry string id and value 1 on click
  • In a W_RADIO container: the button participates in mutual exclusion — clicking highlights it and deselects siblings. Behavior is controlled by the parent container, not the button itself.

W_HELP

Renders an ⓘ icon. Hovering over the icon shows a tooltip containing the HTML from the matching help_table entry. No JavaScript — pure CSS hover.

{"help_temp", "sensor_card", "", "", W_HELP, ""}
  • registry_id: must be ""
  • props: none
  • id: must match the id of an entry in help_table[]
  • name: ignored

Inline behavior: if this node immediately follows a W_TEXT node in the table and both share the same parent_id, the ⓘ icon is rendered inline on the same line as the W_TEXT value — after the unit. The W_HELP node renders nothing on its own in this case. This is automatic and requires no configuration.

Standalone behavior: if this node does not immediately follow a W_TEXT sibling, it renders as its own block — a standalone ⓘ icon with the hover tooltip.

Tooltip position: appears to the right of the icon, overlapping adjacent content. Uses position:absolute so it does not push other elements.

If no matching help_table entry exists: nothing is rendered and a warning is logged to the serial port.


W_HTML

Streams the HTML string from the matching help_table entry directly into the container with no wrapper, icon, or interaction. The HTML appears exactly where the node is declared in the table.

{"sensor_card_info", "sensor_card", "", "", W_HTML, ""}
  • registry_id: must be ""
  • props: none
  • id: must match the id of an entry in help_table[]
  • name: ignored

Use this for descriptive text, headings, callout boxes, or any static content that should appear directly in a card. Place it at the bottom of a card’s children to have it appear below the sensor readings. Place it at the top to have it appear above them.

If no matching help_table entry exists: nothing is rendered and a warning is logged.


Props Reference

Props are specified as a comma-separated string of key:value pairs. Keys and values are case-sensitive. The entire props string must fit in 64 bytes (it is only read at boot, not stored in RAM).

Key Applies to Type Default Effect
min W_BAR, W_DIAL float 0.0 Value at which the widget shows empty/zero
max W_BAR, W_DIAL float 100.0 Value at which the widget shows full
width W_CARD integer 0 (auto) Card width in pixels
momentary W_BUTTON true false Reserved — no current effect

Multiple props: separate with commas, no spaces.

"min:0,max:120"
"min:-40,max:80"
"width:400"

Unrecognized keys are silently ignored.

min and max without has_min/has_max flags: if you omit min or max, the framework uses 0.0 and 100.0 as internal defaults but does not set the has_min/has_max flags. The renderer checks these flags before applying — if neither flag is set and you omit both props, the widget still defaults to 0–100 scale because the renderer falls back to 0.0f and 100.0f directly.


The Help Table

struct HelpNode {
    const char* id;    // matches the id of a W_HELP or W_HTML node in layout_table
    const char* html;  // HTML content — any valid HTML, stored in Flash
};

extern const HelpNode help_table[];
extern const int help_count;

Both fields are const char* — string literals live in Flash. There is no size limit on the html field. The string is streamed directly to the network buffer with sendContent() when requested — it is never copied into RAM.

Defining the help table

const HelpNode help_table[] = {
    {"help_temp",
     "<b>Temperature A</b><br>"
     "AM2302 sensor on GPIO 2.<br>"
     "Range: -40 to 80&deg;C / -40 to 176&deg;F.<br>"
     "Updates every ~6 seconds."},

    {"sensor_card_info",
     "<p><strong>Outdoor Conditions</strong></p>"
     "<p>Live readings from the <strong>AM2302</strong> sensor on GPIO 2.</p>"
     "<p style='color:#888;font-size:.85em'>Range: -40&ndash;80&deg;C &bull; 0&ndash;100% RH</p>"},
};
const int help_count = sizeof(help_table) / sizeof(HelpNode);

help_count must be declared exactly this way — the framework uses it to know how many entries to search.

Linking help content to a layout node

The id field of a HelpNode must exactly match the id field of a W_HELP or W_HTML node in layout_table. This is the only connection. There is no other field to set.

Layout node id Help table id Result
"help_temp" "help_temp" ✓ matched — content rendered
"help_temp" "Help_temp" ✗ not matched — warning logged, nothing rendered
"help_temp" "help_temperature" ✗ not matched — warning logged, nothing rendered

HTML in help content

Any valid HTML is accepted. The tooltip and inline containers already have the framework’s dark theme CSS applied. Some useful patterns:

<!-- Bold label with details -->
<b>Sensor Name</b><br>Description here.<br>Range: 0–100%.

<!-- Section heading + paragraph -->
<p><strong>Card Title</strong></p><p>Descriptive text about what this card shows.</p>

<!-- Muted fine print -->
<p style='color:#888;font-size:.85em'>Technical note here.</p>

<!-- Bullet list -->
<ul style='margin:4px 0;padding-left:16px'>
  <li>Point one</li>
  <li>Point two</li>
</ul>

Use HTML entities for special characters: &deg; for °, &ndash; for –, &bull; for •, &lt; for <.


Documentation Patterns

Pattern 1 — Inline icon on a sensor value (W_TEXT + W_HELP)

Place the W_HELP node immediately after the W_TEXT node, both with the same parent. The icon appears inline after the unit on the same line.

// layout_table
{"w_temp",    "sensor_card", "", "temp_a",  W_TEXT, ""},
{"help_temp", "sensor_card", "", "",        W_HELP, ""},

// help_table
{"help_temp", "<b>Temperature A</b><br>AM2302 on GPIO 2. Updates every 6s."},

Result: Temperature A: 78.08 °F ⓘ — hover the ⓘ to see the tooltip.


Pattern 2 — Standalone icon (W_HELP not preceded by W_TEXT)

Place W_HELP after a W_BAR or W_DIAL node, or anywhere it is not directly after a W_TEXT sibling. It renders as its own block with the icon on its own line.

{"w_humidity",    "sensor_card", "", "humidity_a", W_BAR,  "min:0,max:100"},
{"help_humidity", "sensor_card", "", "",           W_HELP, ""},

Result: bar renders on one line, then ⓘ icon appears below it on its own line.


Pattern 3 — Inline descriptive text in a card (W_HTML)

Place a W_HTML node anywhere in a card’s children. It streams its HTML directly into the card at that position.

// At the bottom of the card — appears after all sensor values
{"sensor_card_info", "sensor_card", "", "", W_HTML, ""},

// help_table
{"sensor_card_info",
 "<p><strong>Outdoor Conditions</strong></p>"
 "<p>Live readings from the AM2302 sensor on GPIO 2.</p>"},

Pattern 4 — Card description at the top

Declare the W_HTML node before the widget nodes to have it appear above the sensor values:

{"sensor_card",      "main_page",  "Live Sensors", "", W_CARD, ""},
{"sensor_card_info", "sensor_card","",             "", W_HTML, ""},  // appears first
{"w_temp_a",         "sensor_card","",    "temp_a", W_DIAL, "min:0,max:120"},

Pattern 5 — Same registry item shown on multiple pages

The same registry item can appear in multiple W_TEXT, W_BAR, or W_DIAL nodes pointing to the same registry_id. Each node must have a unique id. The framework renders them independently and the JS refresh loop updates all of them simultaneously.

{"w_temp_main",   "sensor_card",  "", "temp_a", W_DIAL, "min:0,max:120"},
{"w_temp_summary","overview_card","", "temp_a", W_TEXT, ""},

Boot Diagnostics

The serial port logs every resolution step at boot. Watch for these messages:

>> [Layout] Boot resolution starting...
>> [Layout] Total nodes to resolve: 22
>> [Layout] node[6] id='w_humidity_a' parent='sensor_card' name='' widget=8 container=NO
>> [Layout OK]    node 'w_humidity_a' -> registry[1] id='humidity_a' name='Humidity A'
>> [Layout] Boot resolution complete. 22 nodes resolved.
>> Registered page endpoint: /main_page
>> Registered page endpoint: /system_page

[Layout OK] — node resolved successfully. Shows the numeric registry index and the registry item’s name for verification.

[Layout ERROR]registry_id string did not match any registry entry. The node is skipped at render time. Fix the registry_id in the layout table to match the ID in SENSOR_AUTO or SENSOR_MANUAL exactly.

[Render] WARNING: no help content found — a W_HELP or W_HTML node’s id did not match any entry in help_table. Add the matching HelpNode or correct the id.

[Render] WARNING: no children found — a container node has no children in the layout table. The container heading will render but the card body will be empty.

Measurement as Ratio: The Invariant Beyond Units and Constants

J. Rogers, SE Ohio This paper is at:  https://github.com/BuckRogers1965/Physics-Unit-Coordinate-System/tree/main/docs Abstract Measurement i...