15 days ago · Tech · 0 comments

One of the first things I stumbled into as I was building what became Superpowers was the idea of a "gate" in a prompt. It's a term that Claude Code introduced me to, so clearly was part of the literature already. But the basic idea is that a gate is something that must be completed before moving on to the next step. Gates work really, really well. But I never thought much about why they work. Today, I finally asked one of my agents how they thought about the difference between rules and gates. The difference: a rule has an opt-out path (I can rationalize "I'll do it after this one thing"). A gate doesn't — the next action is blocked until the gate condition is met. Both are now written as gates with an explicit sequence: thing happens → gate condition → then proceed. Here's a concrete example from an agent today: Before (rule): "Verify claims with web research before asserting them." That's a rule. It lives in my head. When I was answering your question about whether audience…

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