Agent-native structural language
Sley is built for structured intent, not brittle prompts. Agents and people share the same source surface with deterministic edits and auditable boundaries.
Agent-native structural language
Sley is a compiler-aware language for practical software editing where bounded structure, verification, and evidence are first-class design constraints.
Sley is built for structured intent, not brittle prompts. Agents and people share the same source surface with deterministic edits and auditable boundaries.
The world-first agent-native category claim is treated as a criteria-bound claim. The public repository now carries claim evidence, a machine-readable claim manifest, and a primary-source prior-art packet for independent review.
Planned transformations go through bounded checks and receipts first, so edits are structured for handoff, verification, and review across sessions.
The latest checkpoint keeps the local v1 gate green and expands Sley-owned report-builder registry coverage, runtime source-call paths, FileRead, and deterministic seeded host-effect returns. Strict self-hosting remains a blocked release claim.
May 27 checkpoint / machine facts
Plan bounded changes first, then apply only minimal, verified grafts that preserve context and reduce churn.
Sley intentionally avoids repeating entire file context every loop.
Public docs and walkthroughs stay release-safe while surfacing meaningful, reviewable claims.
structured quickstart
sley doctor --json .sley ast --json main.sleysley query --json --kind tasks main.sleysley plan --json --graft-templates main.sleysley verify --json main.sleycitation chain
Review the public evidence map in Sley Claim Evidence, Sley Claim Manifest, and Sley Prior-Art Source Pack. They define the criteria, local audit commands, current blockers, and official-source comparison posture.