Rather an expert use case may be the structural analysis or documentation of existing software.
This kind of use aims at importing source code and thus deriving a graphical structural representation as group of related Nassi-Shneiderman diagrams. Possibly even a structural redesign might be a goal.
Typically the imported diagrams don't have to be executable in Structorizer (and won't be) but as far as possible a structural and semantical compatibility to the Structorizer syntax and philosophy can be deemed as helpful to store and represent meaningful diagrams.
Code re-export has been reported to be a sometimes desirable feature (at least for modest-size software), as a raw approach to code translation or cross compilation from one language to another via structograms, e. g. from Processing to Python.
Most important activities:
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