\chapter*{Acknowledgements} \addcontentsline{toc}{chapter}{Acknowledgements} This work was typeset using \TeX{}, the typesetting system created by Donald~E.~Knuth, together with Lua\TeX{} and the many packages maintained by the \TeX{} community. The TikZ and PGF system, created by Till~Tantau and now maintained by Henri~Menke and the PGF/TikZ team, provides the drawing layer on which this package rests. The mathematical ideas behind the occlusion pipeline---a transitive partial order comparator for affine simplices and the minimal partitioning procedure---are my own, and they were first described in my TUGboat article \cite{nice2025luatikz3dtools}. Everything else benefited from assistance. \section*{Use of artificial intelligence} I want to be straightforward about the role that AI tools played in this project. Large-language-model assistants---principally GitHub Copilot backed by models from OpenAI and Anthropic---were used extensively during development. Their contributions included: \begin{itemize} \item \textbf{Code.} Drafting, reviewing, and refactoring substantial portions of the Lua source code, the \LaTeX3 style file, and the test suite. The AI was an active pair-programming partner throughout. \item \textbf{Documentation.} Drafting and editing the prose of this manual, including chapter organization, wording, and stylistic consistency. \item \textbf{Debugging.} Diagnosing errors, suggesting fixes, and explaining unfamiliar corners of the Lua\TeX{} and expl3 ecosystems. \end{itemize} The core algorithms and the mathematical point of view are mine. The implementation and exposition were shaped collaboratively with AI assistance. I see no reason to obscure that fact: these tools made the project substantially more practical to carry out as a single author, and acknowledging their role honestly is, I believe, more useful to readers than pretending otherwise. \section*{Community} The broader \TeX{} and Lua\TeX{} communities deserve thanks for decades of freely shared knowledge. The CTAN maintainers, the authors of the \texttt{l3kernel} and \texttt{l3packages} bundles, and the many contributors to online forums and documentation all made this package possible in ways that are difficult to enumerate individually.