Comment by frank00001
11 hours ago
Sounds like the spec driven approach. You should take a look at this https://github.com/github/spec-kit
11 hours ago
Sounds like the spec driven approach. You should take a look at this https://github.com/github/spec-kit
I basically use a spec driven approach except I only let Github Spec Kit create the initial md file templates and then fill them myself instead of letting the agent do it. Saves a ton of tokens and is reasonably quick and I actually know I wrote the specs myself and it contains what I want. After I'm happy with the md file "harness" I let the agents loose.
The most frustrating issues that pop up are usually library/API conflicts. I work with Gymnasium or PettingZoo and Rlib or stablebaselines3. The APIs are constantly out of sync so it helps to have a working environment were libraries and APIs are in sync beforehand.
Sort of, depending on if your spec includes technology specifics.
For example it might generate a plan that says "I will use library xyz", and I'll add a comment like "use library abc instead" and then tell it to update the plan, which now includes specific technology choices.
It's more like a plan I'd review with a junior engineer.
I'll check out that repo, it might at least give me some good ideas on some other default files I should be generating.
or OpenSpec https://github.com/Fission-AI/OpenSpec/
I think it's much better
Thanks for the link ! I’m very curious about their choices and methods, I’ll try it
> 110 releases in 6 months
Almost a release per work day, esp. if you count standard holidays.
Have you tried this? Review?