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@ -9,8 +9,8 @@ description: 'Learn how to effectively use AI coding assistants beyond simple pr
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> _"Tools amplify your talent. The better your skills, the better the tools serve you."_ — Andrew Hunt, The Pragmatic Programmer
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*This is the first post in the series. Much of it aggregates the insights of colleagues at Nx (Juri Strumpflohner, James Henry, and others)
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and other developers I frequently discuss this topic with (special thanks to Matt Briggs, who is a de-facto co-author of this post).*
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_This is the first post in the series. Much of it aggregates the insights of colleagues at Nx (Juri Strumpflohner, James Henry, and others)
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and other developers I frequently discuss this topic with (special thanks to Matt Briggs, who is a de-facto co-author of this post)._
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**The main takeaway from this guide**: Being intentional and investing in workflows instead of just "using Cursor" or "chatting with GPT" is what separates effective AI-assisted development from impressive demos that don't translate to real productivity gains.
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@ -146,7 +146,6 @@ This primarily affects real organizations, not demo projects, as demos don't nee
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Agents excel at being almost right but struggle with executing exactly what's required. Good interactions should include requesting user input for high-impact operations that are difficult to adjust later (like creating a new package). For instance, when using Nx, an Agent would open a UI with pre-filled generator options that users can modify and confirm. The Agent then continues the work from that point. Have a look at our [latest blog post for a deeper dive into what this looks like](/blog/nx-generators-ai-integration).
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If things go sideways, don't hesitate to reset: dump context, revert changes, and start fresh. These tools drastically reduce "grunt work" costs, making restarts practical.
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### Review
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@ -157,13 +156,13 @@ Even though I try to keep a document where I note things that will require a fol
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### Repeat
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The process is rarely linear and often varies, but follows this general pattern.
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The process is rarely linear and often varies, but follows this general pattern.
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**Common mistakes**: skipping either "Plan" or "Repeat" - both are essential. Do not skip them when working on real projects.
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## Using Rules and Persistent Context
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Every AI coding assistant offers automatic prompt inclusion: Cursor rules, Windsurf rules etc. These are essential for consistent output.
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Every AI coding assistant offers automatic prompt inclusion: Cursor rules, Windsurf rules etc. These are essential for consistent output.
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Keep it manageable - a few hundred lines work well. Your rules should document coding style, recurring patterns, and architecture. If you repeat yourself during development, encode it in rules.
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