Programmability and Release Conditions
Programmability is expressed as governed release logic tied to programme rules, operating windows, and named evidence states.
Programmability means controlled release
Programmability here means controlled release. A tokenized-deposit programme decides when movement can release, wait, return, or recredit based on named evidence states rather than a generic claim of instant money movement.
The release model can use programme rules, operating windows, receiving-institution posture, reservation state, and exception handling without implying that the workflow is always on or independent of partner systems.
Typical release conditions
- Institution and participant are admitted for the requested route.
- Funding or reservation state is current and sufficient for the movement.
- Any linked asset, treasury, or operating-window condition is satisfied.
- Destination acceptance is pre-confirmed where the route requires it.
- Return and recredit rules are available if the close condition fails.
Operating-window truth
Programme rules can still queue, defer, or fail closed outside the active operating window. Public wording stays tied to actual operating rules rather than blanket instant or 24/7 claims.