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Prompting Fundamentals

Most prompting advice is folklore that happens to work. Once you know what the model genuinely does with your words, you can stop memorising tricks and start deriving them.

Beginner8 min3 concepts · 2 questions · 1 cardFree

You are not giving an order

Every topic in this track has been quietly building toward one sentence. Here it is:

The prompt is not a command. It's the opening of a document, and the model's only job is to finish it plausibly.

That's the whole of prompting. Everything below is a consequence.

There is no listener in there. Nothing reads your request, forms an intention, and sets out to satisfy it. There is a text-continuation engine — the same one from the very first topic — and you are handing it the first page.

Which means the real question is never "how do I ask for what I want?" It's:

What kind of document has my answer as its natural continuation — and did I write the opening of that document?


The two openings

Open like this:

write about our product launch

What plausibly follows? Text that continues a vague, contextless, low-effort line. So: something generic, hedged, four bullet points and a summary. The model did not fail you. It finished the document you actually started.

Now open like this:

You're writing the internal launch note for Retain, a learning app. Audience: 40 engineers who already know the product. Two paragraphs, no marketing voice, lead with what changed for them. Release notes below.

Now the plausible continuation is the thing you wanted — because you wrote the opening of a document whose natural continuation could hardly be anything else.

You didn't ask harder. You made your answer the likely one. That is the entire skill.

That's the first of 6 blocks. The rest is where it sticks.

Reading is the easy half. The questions and cards ahead put this idea into your own recall — and then bring it back on schedule until you keep it.

Start this topic

No account needed. Your progress saves from the first block.