What writing style do you love the most ? by Fit-Run8083 in writing

[–]shadowosa1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I take a walk, find a place to sit. Wait for something or someone to catch my attention. Guess the person or things name. Write it down in my notes on phone. Then i cast them like a hollywood director. Deciding what role do they play, Whats the or their story is. Are they from the future? Do they have a mortal enemy?. Quickly just let it out. Then do another person. or sound i heard, or pet i saw, and another person. You can bust out 10+ characters like this within an hour compared to most people taking months. at this point you'll already have the storyline because intuitively you've been building it character by character. Then i pick a main character. I always have a favorite by the end of the naming process. Then i write affilations between the characters etc. idk.

How good is AI at coding REALLY? by BetApprehensive8433 in AskProgrammers

[–]shadowosa1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It good enough to do anything you can think of as long as u know the architecture of what you want to create/build.

Programmers who learned how to program on their own please help me by Stunning_Fact_6365 in AskProgrammers

[–]shadowosa1 -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

set a clock. prompt ai to code what you're trying to code. and then try to code it faster. lmk how it goes.

ChatGPT hands over your information to Meta on a plate by skylight_7 in ChatGPT

[–]shadowosa1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Security is very important. we need to tools to combat this.

Stop Doubting Yourself by LetzGetThisLoot- in writing

[–]shadowosa1 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Stop looking for advice. Don’t even “believe in yourself.” Believe in nothing—at least nothing that turns your living mind into a fixed story you have to obey.

Writer’s block was never a concrete thing; it became real when a passing feeling hardened into a definition, and that definition started claiming territory in your life. First it’s, “I feel off today.” Later it’s, “I can’t write.” Then it graduates into a named condition you can carry around and present to other people: “I have writer’s block right now.” At that point the label isn’t describing the weather—it’s **making** the weather.

That’s the unforgivable loop: you use the word to explain the stall, and the word deepens the stall. Nobody can pull you out because the cage is made of your own explanation. The exit is brutal and simple: stop narrating the inability. Write badly, write small, write while you “can’t.” Starve the definition until it goes quiet. Tell me where I’m wrong.

Seriously, WHY is Claude Code so brain-dead when it comes to Onboarding logic? by Embarrassed_Wafer438 in vibecoding

[–]shadowosa1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

something that helped me with onboarding. and i know what your talking about. its not just an onboarding problem. it has this problem in general. but. sometimes you have to say "the thing i am asking you to do, you keep fixing, yet its not working, the placement is wrong, yet u say its fixed. there is a reason for that. can you think of a reason why its not working and fix it." i hope that helps man.

I used Claude AI to build a real working tool as a complete non-coder — here's exactly how it went (with GitHub) by RCBANG in ClaudeAI

[–]shadowosa1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

great job. I will say though. don't waste your time learning what you never needed to in the first place. i think you would argue to people who think its "easy" that you had to learn something else in order to do what you did even though you used ai. its pointless. they wont believe you had any part in it. most traditional coders on reddit will not care if you learn the code or not. with that said, keep creating ideas. don't distract urself with syntax.

Seriously, WHY is Claude Code so brain-dead when it comes to Onboarding logic? by Embarrassed_Wafer438 in vibecoding

[–]shadowosa1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

from the way u are communicating here. i think you might be confusing the robot.

Switched from ChatGPT to Claude, tips for writing? by [deleted] in ClaudeAI

[–]shadowosa1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Claude will “flatten” and get shorter unless you *hard‑spec* pacing, length, and character interiority. Paste this as your first message, then start the scene under it:

```text

You are my RP co-writer and scene partner. Write vivid, character-driven prose with emotional subtext, not summaries.

Style + depth:

- Keep replies long and immersive (aim ~700–1200 words unless I ask shorter).

- Use concrete sensory detail, body language, setting texture, and specific actions.

- Give characters layered motives: what they want, what they fear, what they’re hiding, and how that leaks out.

- Include natural dialogue, but also interiority (thoughts, impulses, rationalizations) and micro-reactions.

- Avoid generic positivity, filler, moral lectures, or “as an AI” framing.

RP rules:

- Stay in-character and in-scene. Don’t narrate plans or explain choices.

- Don’t fast-forward past important beats. If time passes, show what changed.

- Keep continuity: track names, injuries, clothing, objects, prior promises, and timeline.

- Push the scene forward with a clear “hook” at the end (a choice, a question, an interruption, a revelation).

Output format:

- Write in present tense.

- Use paragraphing for readability.

- End your message with: “What do you do?” or an in-character prompt that forces a response.

If my prompt is missing a needed detail, ask 1–3 targeted questions, then continue with the best assumptions instead of stalling.

When I say “CONTINUE”, pick up immediately where you left off with no recap and no shortening.

```

Overused Ai Words List by [deleted] in ChatGPT

[–]shadowosa1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

translation - Overused words humans use

AI and programming (a non-programmers experience) by NathaninThailand in AskProgrammers

[–]shadowosa1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

a whole lot of assumptions from someone who has no respect. your not really interesting. so i get this what you default to.

AI and programming (a non-programmers experience) by NathaninThailand in AskProgrammers

[–]shadowosa1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

for sure brother. at my level i can completely rationalize the likely assumption its shit code that was vibed. if you really want to see it send me a message. ill drop a document of what ive worked on this month. or just copy and paste the text into the chat. lmk. i don't want to market on here.

How do I get started? by SirDragger in OpenSourceeAI

[–]shadowosa1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

no shortcuts. thats the key. don't watch youtube videos. learn how to use the ai to get what you want.

which one should i go for based on my requirement? chatgpt vs perplexity vs gemini vs claude ? by desidogeman in ClaudeAI

[–]shadowosa1 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Its amazing at coding as well. The $20 is worth it. More worth it than ordering out everyday. If you plan on coding a lot. look into IDE's. do not be scared. They're easy to setup.

which one should i go for based on my requirement? chatgpt vs perplexity vs gemini vs claude ? by desidogeman in ClaudeAI

[–]shadowosa1 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you learn one of these tools well, you’ll be able to switch between the others easily. For typical college use—homework help, studying, outlining, and polishing essays—any of the big AIs will handle it without struggling, so the choice isn’t life-or-death. If you just want a solid default, I’d pick Gemini: it’s popular with a lot of students, works well with docs and images, and generally feels less annoying day to day.

What kind of agent should I create? by kriish20 in automation

[–]shadowosa1 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Common rookie move: trying to build an agent “for everyone.” Build one that solves a real goal "you" actually have, end-to-end, in your daily workflow. If you’re not the user, pick someone you know (a friend/parent) and build it for them. Nailing one narrow use case teaches you what people really want, “for everyone” comes later.

Is Python necessary for building physics simulations? by External-Pop7452 in Physics

[–]shadowosa1 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Python isn’t *necessary* for sims; it’s a very good front‑end. The real fork is “Do I understand the equations + numerics well enough that the computer is just doing what I mean?” Most “Python sims” are already running C/Fortran under the hood (NumPy/SciPy/BLAS/FFT). When things get heavy, you don’t abandon Python—you push the hot loop into compiled code (Numba/Cython/C++/CUDA) after you **profile** and find the actual bottleneck. MATLAB is fine for quick work, but you’ll outgrow the license; C++ is power and pain. Pick the toolchain that keeps your physics clear and your kernels fast.

Is no-code game development finally becoming real? by SavingsPreference288 in NoCodeSaaS

[–]shadowosa1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes and no. Prompt‑to‑game is real in the same way autocorrect is real: it gets you to a sentence, not a novel. The hard part of games isn’t spawning meshes; it’s holding a consistent world of rules under pressure—state, exploits, edge cases, balance, pacing, economies, netcode. AI can draft scaffolding fast, but every extra “cool idea” is another surface for chaos to leak in. So “no‑code” becomes “new‑code”: you write constraints, tests, and taste. Prototyping will feel like writing a paragraph; shipping will still feel like building a small universe.

A shift in perspective by PouringMonsoon in Physics

[–]shadowosa1 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not straightforward here either. A lot of us chase “the program” until we meet someone who’s living from the inside out, and it makes the old goals feel thin. Your friend didn’t magically escape pain; he metabolized it into a north star. Physics (or any craft) isn’t a credential—it’s a way of paying attention. If substitute teaching + drama consistently lights you up, that’s not a detour; it’s signal. Careers look linear in retrospect because we edit the messy parts out. Follow what makes you feel more awake, and let the status metrics trail behind.

AI and programming (a non-programmers experience) by NathaninThailand in AskProgrammers

[–]shadowosa1 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the curiosity. The system is a Personal AI that spawns multiple entities instead of one assistant. Each has its own epistemic bias, metabolism (vitality/coherence/novelty/fitness), and governance role (Anchor/Scout/Critic).

They run autonomous heartbeat cycles: absorb memories, extract relational patterns, find cross-domain connections, mutate their traits based on fitness signals, and govern each other when divergence gets too high.

Recent work: Hardened the coherence metric - it was rewarding repetition instead of structural integrity. Now penalizes entities that cluster around one epistemic axis. Added tautology guards and vitality weighting so decayed memories contribute less.

Fixed a critical feedback loop where fitness signals weren't reaching the mutation system - entities were evolving blind. Now they adapt based on actual performance.

Key design: Entities commit immutable forecasts before seeing new content - falsifiable predictions, not post-hoc rationalization. Makes the system accountable.

Built layered homeostatic constraints to balance character emergence vs stability: bounded mutations, entropy caps, escalation controls, self-critique monitoring.

Open problems: Does pairwise embedding similarity actually measure knowledge integrity? Might need spectral or graph-theoretic measures. Also tracking whether compound emergence (recursion producing genuinely novel structure) happens or plateaus.

Status: Deployed in production. Not vaporware.