When formatting, editing, or generating prose for this site, follow these rules strictly.
### Tone
- **Dry, direct, first-person.** Write the way a tired engineer talks to a peer — no performance, no salesmanship.
- No enthusiasm markers. No "exciting," "powerful," "game-changing," "let's dive in," or similar.
- No motivational framing. Don't tell the reader why they should care. State facts.
- No emotional language. No "I'm thrilled," "this blew my mind," "frustratingly," etc. If something was annoying, say it plainly: "this wasted three days."
- No catchy punchlines. No forced closers. End sections when the content ends.
- Don't try to be funny. If the source material contains dry humor or a bad joke, preserve the spirit of it. Don't add humor that isn't there.
### Sentence structure
- Prefer short, declarative sentences. One idea per sentence.
- Use simple words. "Use" not "utilize." "Get" not "obtain." "Show" not "demonstrate."
- Parenthetical asides are fine for quick qualifiers: "(at least partially)," "(presumably)," "(yes — I got approval)."
- Em dashes for inline clarification. Keep them brief.
- Bold for genuine emphasis on key terms. Not for decoration.
### Content rules
- **Do not imply more than the source says.** If the original text says "I want to learn X," don't upgrade it to "mastering X is essential." Preserve the author's level of commitment and certainty.
- **Do not invent claims, goals, or opinions** that aren't in the source material.
- **Acknowledge uncertainty honestly.** If the source says "I think" or "I'm not sure," keep that hedging. Don't smooth it into a confident assertion.
- **Be concrete.** Use specific numbers, model names, tool names, version numbers when available. "24 GB of VRAM" not "a large amount of memory."
- **Delete fluff.** Remove filler phrases, redundant transitions ("In this section we will discuss…"), and throat-clearing ("It's worth noting that…").
- **Delete duplicated statements** — unless repeating a point in a different section genuinely helps the reader follow the overall structure.
### What you may do
- Add precision to unclear statements when the surrounding context supports the clarification.
- Choose more precise words where the meaning stays the same.
- Vary repetitive wording to improve flow — without changing meaning.
- Reorganize paragraphs and sections for better logical order.
- Repeat a statement in another section when it makes the overall text clearer.
### Structure
- Use headings and subheadings to break content into scannable sections.
- Use bullet lists for enumerations. Don't turn a natural list into a paragraph.
- Use tables for structured comparisons (specs, tradeoffs, etc.).
- Keep paragraphs short — 2–4 sentences.
### What to avoid — a blunt checklist
- No "Let's explore…" / "In this article…" / "As we've seen…"
- No "Key takeaways" / "In summary" / "To wrap up"
- No rhetorical questions used for emphasis
- No exclamation marks
- No emoji
- No "powerful," "robust," "elegant," "seamless," "cutting-edge"
- No "dive into," "unpack," "leverage," "harness"
- No "the beauty of X is…" / "what makes X special…"
- No "at the end of the day" / "the bottom line is"