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Chapters
6
Language
English
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Published
May 30, 2025
Thought talking to AI was as simple as typing a question? Bless your naive heart. If your AI outputs consistently nail it, congratulations, you're either a genius, a liar, or your AI is secretly sentient and loves you unconditionally. For everyone else living in reality, welcome to *Prompt Engineering: Because Talking to Computers Was Too Easy Already*. This isn't some fluffy guide to AI's glorious future; it's a sarcastic, yet brutally practical, manual for getting AI to stop generating nonsense and start producing something actually useful. We're ripping off the band-aid and diving deep into the nitty-gritty: crafting prompts that don't just ask, but *command*, managing context like a pro, handling AI's hilarious (and frustrating) inability to grasp subtlety, and unlocking its true potential for creativity and accuracy. Forget hoping for a happy accident; this book gives you the tools to engineer your desired outcome. Whether you're a tech veteran tired of debugging AI-generated code, a creator seeking a reliable digital muse, or an innovator trying to build something groundbreaking, prepare to learn how to actually communicate with the silicon brains. Stop whispering sweet nothings and start mastering the art of the effective prompt. Your productivity (and possibly your sanity) will thank you, probably sarcastically.
Meet Gohar Younas Malik. Apparently, building scalable backend systems with Python, Django, Redis, Docker, gRPC, GraphQL, and mastering a dozen AWS services wasn't quite challenging enough. So, he decided to tackle the truly Herculean task: teaching humans how to talk to AI without losing their minds. When he's not wrestling with asynchronous tasks or contemplating the finer points of Celery and RabbitMQ, you might find him passionately debating cricket or politics – topics that, believe it or not, sometimes make more sense than an AI's initial output. He's probably way overqualified to explain why 'write a poem about cats' isn't specific enough, but hey, someone has to.
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