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Comment by K0balt

5 hours ago

I independently converged on something similar. I use two to three specification docs for my c++ work: a firmware manual (describes features and interfaces)) , an implementation plan (order of implementation, mechanisms where specified - new features go in here) and a product manual ( user story, external effects) I start with a user story, build an implementation plan, write the code, write the firmware manual, check the 3 documents +code for consistency and coherence. Either change the code or the documentation to reflect a coherent unified truth. (Implementation plan gradually becomes as-built) I also have the code comprehensively commented so that it is difficult to misinterpret. “Correct, coherent, consistent, commented”

We iterate feature by feature through this process, and occasionally circle back on the original product manual to identify drift.

After the original documentation is drafted, I have the agent write up placeholder files and define all of the interfaces we expect to need (we will end up adding a lot later, but that’s ok) every file should reflect a clear separation of concerns, and can only be reached into through its defined interface, all else is private. I end up with more individual files than I would by hand, but by constraining scope at file granularity, and defining an inviolate interface per file, I avoid the LLM tendency to take shortcuts that create unmaintainable code.

I also open each new context with an onboarding process that briefly describes the logos and the ethos of the project, why the agent should be deeply invested in the success of the project, as well as learnings.md which the agent writes as it comes across notable gotchas or strong preferences of mine.

Needless to say, I use one million context , and it’s a token fire… but the results are solid and my productivity is 5-10x