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Recently, I received many private messages from classmates asking how to use prompt words in the primary market. To be honest, this area is indeed a bit tricky—because the platform landscape is constantly changing, with new projects and new platforms emerging all the time. The previous set of scripts I summarized has long needed updating.
I have reorganized the templates I originally accumulated, and this current version is barely usable. However, I recently found that Grok's official prompt word library seems to be more practical, and the experience is quite good.
If you are also working on the primary market and happen to need a framework for prompts, feel free to discuss in the comments. I’ve summarized a few common ideas, and everyone can work together to optimize and iterate. Maybe we can find a more efficient method.
The prompt words for the primary market really need to be updated frequently; otherwise, you're just using outdated tools.
I want to see your summarized approach; I haven't quite figured it out yet.
The prompt framework should have been open-sourced and discussed long ago; it feels like everyone is just trying things out in silence.
The official Grok library does have useful stuff, but the documentation is a bit hard to find.
The platform has been changing too quickly lately; the previous scripts become outdated in half a month, which is really annoying.
Having a prompt library for each person is better than everyone fiddling around blindly.
This is exactly what I need; I'm waiting to see your version.
Have you considered creating a continuously updated framework collection?
Grok > other prompt libraries, no explanation needed.
Is all this fuss just for this little thing?
Has the primary market now become this competitive, even requiring you to check inventory for prompt words?
Haha, finally someone has systematized this matter, previously everyone was exploring on their own.
Can the prompt word framework be open-sourced? I also want to follow up on optimization ideas.
To put it simply, it still depends on execution; no matter how good the template is, if not used, it's useless.
But is Grok better than others? It seems DeepSeek has also been making efforts in this area recently.
The iteration speed must be fast; it feels like the template from last week is already outdated this week.
Grok library is indeed top-notch; I’ve been using it too, much more reliable than those paid options.
Prompt words, to put it simply, depend on who iterates faster. Once they stop, they fall behind.
Template sharing? Sure, everyone’s on the same boat anyway.
Tinkering is better than doing nothing at all.
I do have some ideas about frameworks; just wait until you organize them.
But the Grok system really saves a lot of trouble.
The threshold for the primary market is still soaring; prompt words need to be adjusted accordingly.
The changes in the primary market are really fast; it feels like just after summarizing, I have to revise again.
By the way, have you tried combining on-chain data to optimize prompts? Curious about how effective it is.
Prompt engineering, to put it simply, is an ongoing iteration process; there is no perfect solution.
I’ve accumulated a bunch of frameworks, but I feel like half of them are already outdated, really stressful.
The track is changing too quickly; the previous dividends I benefited from are now mainstream.
However, it's great that the community is working together to optimize this approach. Looking forward to seeing everyone's new ideas.
The Grok library is indeed top-notch, much better than figuring things out on your own.
As for scripts, whenever the platform changes, you have to start over from scratch, so annoying.
Just want to share a link to save myself from exploring again.
Prompt word frameworks are most afraid of becoming outdated as you use them; it's good that you update quickly.
The grok library is indeed top-notch, much more convenient than figuring things out on your own.
The primary market still relies on prompt fine-tuning; there's no one-size-fits-all solution.
Why does it feel like now everything has to be assisted by AI? It's a bit exhausting.