Tags III:
Loadable tags begin with alpha, underscore, ?, ! if followed by something, or / followed by alphanumerics-plus to the >.
If a tag's form loads as a tag with the exact same contents, it is loadable and molds to the same string as it forms to.
If not, call <X> the tag's form. If X is the null string, then the tag molds as <!>. Otherwise, the tag molds as <\X>.
At load time, load an empty tag if the contents are exactly "!", otherwise strip the leading backslash if there is one.
So, <\!> would be (the useless) tag with contents "!", and <\> would actually be a synonym for <!>, but no…