Fin_Code 3 days ago

You are working against LLM attention. A LLM looks at a conversation and focuses on its attention points. Usually the start and end. Your previous work falls into the out of attention space and gets nuked.

If your asking how to have everything attention we currently can't.

  • campervans a day ago

    Damn...

    So you're saying I need some adderral.ai

HenryBemis 3 days ago

My code (that ChatGPT writes for me is from 500 to 1000 lines). Every 5-7 versions, it starts messing things up.

I keep the working versions on a Word file on a Landscape, A3, 3 columns (version number, comment/changelog, the_code)(yes, cheap, scalable, easy).

So, every 5-7 versions, I start a new chat. I ask ChatGPT to read/write a summary/description of the code, and then I proceed to ask it for new changes/enhancements.

  • matternous 2 days ago

    Wait until you learn about git

    • campervans a day ago

      Yeh, a free GitHub and breaking the code into small functions would 10x your flow here

gravez 3 days ago

can you explain a bit more what do you mean by burning down? and what do you use .md files for? Documenting the code?

  • campervans a day ago

    I use .md files to keep Cursor on track, the flow I use is something like...

    Define a feature in detail (using trascription) -> Get o3 or Gemini 2.5 pro to break it down into very small testable tasks. -> review this -> then paste into a tasks.md file -> write and architecture.md file or similar for any additional context needed. -> then prompt Cursor to work through tasks.md step by step.

    This keeps it on track, with the whole feature defined from the outset.

    But eventually... it will try to ignore the dockerfile and setup up locally, create multiple .env files, write code with placeholders, ignore a files it's just created and written...

    It's impossible to get it back on track - it gets into a debug loop of making things worse rather than getting back on track.

    • dalmo3 18 hours ago

      You can ask cursor itself to create and update the tasks.md file.

      Tell it to remove the task from the file after it's done, then do a commit. That way if it screws up at some point you can checkout the last good commit and start from there in a new chat.

yb6677 2 days ago

One tip I have found - start new conversations windows when changing focus, so it doesn’t refer to history and make wild assumptions.

  • campervans a day ago

    Yeh, I've found this helpful too, mentally if feels like a commit or PR, all the code for one thing in one chat then a new chat for new things

v5o a day ago

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