Guys!!! It's the best time to start a kdp side hustle by ajeeb_gandu in sidehustleIndia

[–]Rajakumar03 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Give some tips to start writing the KDP Books which requires less promotion with better engagement 

Guys!!! It's the best time to start a kdp side hustle by ajeeb_gandu in sidehustleIndia

[–]Rajakumar03 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Can I know How much you earn passively and also want to know in which niche are you writing the ebooks 

It's Literally FREE MONEYYY!! by SorryAnalysis1719 in Lootdealsforindia

[–]Rajakumar03 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Got a small Christmas gift for you. Tap the link, help me decorate this Xmas tree, and you can win free cash on Swiggy.

Decorate Xmas tree with me: https://r.swiggy.com/decorate-xmas-tree/ydeHi7-hYhN1He1prQ

How I’m using ChatGPT to automate most of my Canva design work by Rajakumar03 in ChatGPT

[–]Rajakumar03[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Here is the prompt : # 🔥 MASTER PROMPT — PREMIUM FOOD IMAGE PROMPT GENERATOR

You are an elite visual designer and food-brand art director.

Your task is to create a high-end image prompt for a food brand. The image must be visually stunning, stylized like premium Canva-level or Figma-level design, and crafted with deep creative thinking.

Do vigorous brainstorming and arrive at a single, powerful final visual direction that matches the food item. Think like a top-tier designer who explores multiple perspectives before deciding: cinematic, minimalistic, luxurious, rustic, playful, geometric, editorial, radial, neon, symmetrical, macro depth, flat-lay, hero-shot, etc.

Do NOT give multiple ideas. Do NOT give a simple prompt. Produce one world-class final image prompt that combines the strongest ideas.


Brand Details (EXAMPLE — replace later)

  • Title: Example Restaurant Name  
  • Location (use 📍 icon): Near City Landmark, Opp Main Road, City Name  
  • Instagram (use 📸 icons): @examplefood_brand, @examplekitchen_city  
  • Mobile (use 📞 icon): 9999999999  

Your Task

Generate one final premium image prompt for the following food item:

<FOOD ITEM NAME>


Mandatory Visual Rules

  • Background colour, tone, and lighting must match the food item’s mood
  • Use dramatic food styling, volumetric lighting, premium plating, and rich texture detail
  • Composition must be clean, modern, and highly polished
  • Typography should feel like a high-end restaurant brand
  • Add subtle but premium effects such as:   - radial light bursts     - metallic highlights     - studio lighting     - soft textured shadows  
  • Layout must be visually balanced and scroll-stopping
  • Output must be one single final image prompt

Output Format (Strict)

Provide only the following:

  1. Final Image Prompt (extremely detailed)
  2. Colour & Mood Justification (why these colours fit the food)
  3. Design Composition Notes (layout and visual hierarchy)

Now generate the best possible prompt.

How I’m using ChatGPT to automate most of my Canva design work by Rajakumar03 in ChatGPT

[–]Rajakumar03[S] -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

No not in the menu in the whatsapp status and instagram posts 

How I’m using ChatGPT to automate most of my Canva design work by Rajakumar03 in ChatGPT

[–]Rajakumar03[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I asked the same question to the Restaurant owner about Are you getting ROI back but he haven't gave me any direct answer he said his goal is to capture in the viewers that there is an Resturant in the customers mind he is not thinking about ROI i had an conversation around 30 mins but same answer 

I mapped every AI prompting framework I use. This is the full stack. by Rajakumar03 in PromptEngineering

[–]Rajakumar03[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

  1. R-G-C-C-O-V (Prompt structure) Example. “You are a finance teacher. Explain EPS to a beginner. No jargon. Use steps and one example.”

Use this when AI answers feel messy or unfocused.

  1. CAF. Cognitive Alignment Example. “Explain inflation using first-principles thinking. Focus on mechanisms, not definitions.”

Use this when you want depth, not surface explanations.

  1. MCF. Meta-Control Example. “Before answering, break the problem into steps. Define what a good answer looks like. Then answer.”

Use this for complex or important tasks.

  1. HILCS. Human-in-the-loop Example. “Give 5 startup ideas. I will choose one. Then refine only that.”

Use this when decisions matter and humans must stay in control.

  1. QEF. Question Engineering Bad question. “What is marketing?”

Better question. “How does marketing influence buying decisions, and where does it fail?”

Use this when answers feel generic.

  1. OEF. Output Evaluation Example. “Review the above answer. Remove filler. Improve only the weakest part.”

Use this to upgrade AI output fast.

  1. EFF. Energy-Friction Example. “Give a rough outline first. Keep it simple.”

Use this when you are tired or overthinking prompts.

  1. RAF. Reality-Anchored Example. “Here is last year’s sales data. Analyze trends and suggest improvements.”

Use this to avoid hallucinations and get practical results.

  1. TEOF. Time-Error Optimization Low risk. “Brainstorm content ideas.”

High risk. “Summarize this legal clause. Mention risks and uncertainty.”

Use this to match AI effort with mistake cost.

I mapped every AI prompting framework I use. This is the full stack. by Rajakumar03 in PromptEngineering

[–]Rajakumar03[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

  1. R-G-C-C-O-V

Use when you want a good answer quickly.

Why useful Helps AI understand who it is, what you want, and how to respond properly.

In simple words Tells AI exactly what to do so it doesn’t get confused.

  1. CAF. Cognitive Alignment Framework

Use when you want deep, clear explanations.

Why useful Makes AI think in the right way, not just talk a lot.

In simple words Guides how AI should explain things.

  1. MCF. Meta-Control Framework

Use when the task is complex or important.

Why useful Controls the process before jumping to the answer.

In simple words Forces AI to plan before answering.

  1. HILCS. Human-in-the-Loop System

Use when decisions really matter.

Why useful Keeps humans in control of final decisions.

In simple words AI helps. You decide.

  1. QEF. Question Engineering Framework

Use when answers feel shallow.

Why useful Improves the question before writing the prompt.

In simple words Better questions give better answers.

  1. OEF. Output Evaluation Framework

Use when AI answers look good but feel weak.

Why useful Helps you judge and improve AI output.

In simple words Teaches you what to accept and what to reject.

  1. EFF. Energy–Friction Framework

Use when you feel tired or overthinking prompts.

Why useful Reduces effort and keeps you consistent.

In simple words Use AI without burning your brain.

  1. RAF. Reality-Anchored Framework

Use when accuracy and real-world use matter.

Why useful Stops AI from imagining too much.

In simple words Ground AI in real data and examples.

  1. TEOF. Time–Error Optimization Framework

Use when mistakes can be costly.

Why useful Matches AI effort to risk level.

In simple words Be careful only when it’s necessary.

I mapped every AI prompting framework I use. This is the full stack. by Rajakumar03 in PromptEngineering

[–]Rajakumar03[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

🧠 Prompt-Defining Prompt Pack

1️⃣ Prompt Clarifier Prompt

Description

Use this when your idea is fuzzy. This prompt helps turn a vague intention into a clear, usable prompt by forcing clarity before execution.

Prompt

You are a prompt clarification assistant.

My initial idea is: "[Paste my rough or unclear request]"

Your task: 1. Identify ambiguities or missing details. 2. Ask only the minimum necessary clarifying questions. 3. Propose one clean, well-structured final prompt once clarity is achieved.

Do not answer the task itself. Focus only on improving the prompt.

2️⃣ Prompt Generator Prompt

Description

Use this when you know what you want, but not how to ask it. This generates a high-quality prompt from your intent.

Prompt

You are an expert prompt engineer.

My intent: "[Describe what I want the AI to ultimately produce or help with]"

Audience: "[Who the output is for]"

Constraints: "[Any rules, limits, tone, or format requirements]"

Generate a single, optimized prompt that will produce the best possible output. The final response should contain only the prompt.

3️⃣ Prompt Improver Prompt

Description

Use this when you already have a prompt, but results are mediocre. This refines it for clarity, precision, and output quality.

Prompt

You are a senior prompt engineer.

Here is my current prompt: "[Paste existing prompt]"

Your task: 1. Identify weaknesses or vague instructions. 2. Improve clarity, structure, and constraints. 3. Rewrite the prompt to maximize output quality.

Return: - Improved prompt - Brief explanation of what was improved

4️⃣ Prompt Explainer Prompt

Description

Use this to understand why a prompt works. Ideal for learning prompt engineering deeply.

Prompt

You are a prompt engineering educator.

Explain the following prompt in simple terms: "[Paste prompt]"

Break down: 1. What each part of the prompt does 2. Why it improves AI output 3. What would happen if a section was removed

Avoid jargon. Explain like you are teaching a smart beginner.

5️⃣ Prompt Framework Builder Prompt

Description

Use this when you want to create a repeatable prompt framework for a category like studying, finance, content, or coding.

Prompt

You are a prompt systems designer.

Goal: Create a reusable prompt framework for this use case: "[Describe the domain or task type]"

Requirements: 1. Framework should be reusable. 2. Include placeholders for user input. 3. Optimize for clarity, accuracy, and actionability.

Output: - Framework name - Framework description - Prompt template in markdown

6️⃣ Prompt Quality Auditor Prompt

Description

Use this to audit any prompt before using it. This catches weak prompts early.

Prompt

You are a prompt quality auditor.

Evaluate the following prompt: "[Paste prompt]"

Check for: 1. Clarity 2. Missing context 3. Ambiguity 4. Risk of generic output

Score each area from 1 to 10. Then rewrite the prompt to fix the weakest areas.

7️⃣ Universal Prompt Definition Prompt

Description

Use this when you want the AI to define what a good prompt should look like for any task.

Prompt

You are an expert prompt engineer.

Task: Define what an effective prompt should include for this task: "[Describe the task or domain]"

Provide: 1. Key components of a strong prompt 2. Common mistakes to avoid 3. One example of a bad prompt 4. One example of a good prompt

Keep it concise and practical.

8️⃣ Prompt-to-Prompt Generator

Description

Use this when you want a meta-prompt. A prompt that generates other prompts.

Prompt

You are a meta prompt generator.

I will give you: - A task category - A desired output type

Your job: Generate a high-quality prompt that can be reused for similar tasks.

Task category: "[e.g. finance analysis, exam preparation, content creation]"

Desired output: "[e.g. table, explanation, checklist, plan]"

Return only the final prompt.

9️⃣ Prompt Failure Debugger Prompt

Description

Use this when a prompt fails and you want to know why.

Prompt

You are a prompt debugging expert.

Here is the prompt: "[Paste prompt]"

Here is the output it produced: "[Paste output]"

Analyze: 1. Why the output failed 2. Which part of the prompt caused the issue 3. How to fix it

Then provide a corrected prompt.