this post was submitted on 11 Apr 2026
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Programming
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I've had an opposite experience. Here are some guidelines I follow:
A benefit to this method is that there is less wasted effort on my part. If Claude writes the code wrong, I can trace the reason for the mistake to a gap in the plan. I can then update the plan, throw away the code (if I have to), and have Claude reimplement the code again.
Rinse and Repeat.
Keep knowledge, plans, and implementation details clearly separated (you can copy your latest successful knowledge files to new projects to get started on future projects even faster).
Keep the goals of each plan as small and granular as possible (easier the define plans). Knowledge, plans, and implementation details all get tracked in your repository just like your code does.
I'm a career developer, and have been writing code for over 20 years. I'm adding this bit because I understand how AI driven development can look like a threat to developers. Over this last year, I've had a shift in this thinking though. I can take what I've learned through my career and use it to inform writing successful specifications Claude can use to write effective code. Claude may not solve all of our coding problems, but if used effectively, it solves nearly everything you throw at it.
Yeah, I wonder sometimes if people who fail tonget usable code are
1- Asking it to do much at once.
2- Don't actually understand the problem or coding enough to ask it to do the right thing.
If you say, "Write a program that does X", it will most likely fail to give you what you want.
It works great if you break it down into parts.
Write a program that takes this databas input and converts it this way.
Now uodate it so the output gets displayed this way.
Adjust the colors.
Add the ability to save the output in this format.
This looks good but I need to swap these parts of the output and add this data to the output.
That sort of iterative, step by step process. Or even just, when there are bugs, give it the error output, explain that X needs to be Y. Also, at some point you may need to also look at the code. I had an issue where it was running twice on some data and after looking at it I realized it was processing things as images and links, because the links had images (but images did not always have links). I explained this problem, and pointed to where it was and it fixed it.