I have multiple system prompts that I use before getting to the actual specification.
1. I use the Socratic Coder[1] system prompt to have a back and forth conversation about the idea, which helps me hone the idea and improve it. This conversation forces me to think about several aspects of the idea and how to implement it.
2. I use the Brainstorm Specification[2] user prompt to turn that conversation into a specification.
3. I use the Brainstorm Critique[3] user prompt to critique that specification and find flaws in it which I might have missed.
4. I use a modified version of the Brainstorm Specification user prompt to refine the specification based on the critique and have a final version of the document, which I can either use on my own or feed to something like Claude Code for context.
Doing those things improved the quality of the code and work spit out by the LLMs I use by a significant amount, but more importantly, it helped me write much better code on my own because I know have something to guide me, while before I used to go blind.
As a bonus, it also helped me decide if an idea was worth it or not; there are times I'm talking with the LLM and it asks me questions I don't feel like answering, which tells me I'm probably not into that idea as much as I initially thought, it was just my ADHD hyper focusing on something.
1. I use the Socratic Coder[1] system prompt to have a back and forth conversation about the idea, which helps me hone the idea and improve it. This conversation forces me to think about several aspects of the idea and how to implement it.
2. I use the Brainstorm Specification[2] user prompt to turn that conversation into a specification.
3. I use the Brainstorm Critique[3] user prompt to critique that specification and find flaws in it which I might have missed.
4. I use a modified version of the Brainstorm Specification user prompt to refine the specification based on the critique and have a final version of the document, which I can either use on my own or feed to something like Claude Code for context.
Doing those things improved the quality of the code and work spit out by the LLMs I use by a significant amount, but more importantly, it helped me write much better code on my own because I know have something to guide me, while before I used to go blind.
As a bonus, it also helped me decide if an idea was worth it or not; there are times I'm talking with the LLM and it asks me questions I don't feel like answering, which tells me I'm probably not into that idea as much as I initially thought, it was just my ADHD hyper focusing on something.
[1]: https://github.com/jamesponddotco/llm-prompts/blob/trunk/dat...
[2]: https://github.com/jamesponddotco/llm-prompts/blob/trunk/dat...
[3]: https://github.com/jamesponddotco/llm-prompts/blob/trunk/dat...