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User Prompt Examples & Best Practices

This page belongs to the User Prompt Workspace.

It answers one question:

how to phrase a task more clearly.

Four high-frequency improvement directions

  • make the task goal concrete
  • make the output format explicit
  • separate hard constraints into their own list
  • write requirements like “no explanation” or “JSON only” as explicit rules

Pattern 1: from vague sentence to executable task

Basic version

Write a poem.

More reliable version

Write a seven-character regulated verse about autumn longing.
Requirements:
1. Eight lines total, seven characters per line.
2. Express emotion through imagery instead of slogan-like direct sentiment.
3. Keep the language restrained and delicate.
4. Output only the poem, with no extra explanation.

Why this is stronger

  • the topic is clearer
  • the form and format are clearer
  • the “no explanation” requirement is explicit

Pattern 2: lock down the output structure

Basic version

Organize this meeting content.

More reliable version

Turn the following meeting content into a concise meeting summary.
Use this fixed structure:
1. Topic
2. Key decisions
3. Action items
4. Owners and deadlines

Requirements:
1. Do not miss explicit action items.
2. Do not invent decisions not mentioned in the source.
3. Write in concise professional English.

Pattern 3: make output format strict

Basic version

Analyze this feedback.

More reliable version

Read the following user feedback and output JSON.

Required fields:
- sentiment: positive / neutral / negative
- summary: within 20 words
- issues: array of concrete issues
- suggestions: array of actionable recommendations

Requirements:
1. Output valid JSON only.
2. Do not add extra explanation.
3. If the source lacks evidence, do not invent details.

How to test user prompts

In basic/user, a common test flow is:

  1. create a workspace version on the left
  2. choose original, workspace, or a saved version on the right
  3. run testing
  4. compare whether outputs become more complete, more format-compliant, and less likely to drift

Because the executed object is the user prompt itself, this mode usually does not need extra test text on the right.

When to move to variable mode

If your prompt clearly contains reusable slots such as:

  • {{topic}}
  • {{audience}}
  • {{tone}}
  • {{productName}}

and you plan to run the same structure across many inputs, Variable Workspace is usually a better fit.