This tool is fundamentally about learning to prompt well — not just generating prompts for you. Every step is designed to teach you what a good prompt is made of, so that over time you need the tool less and your own prompting instincts grow stronger.
What this tool is
The Prompt Assembly Tool breaks prompt-writing into clear, teachable steps — Role, Context, Task, Style, Examples, and Modifiers. Each step corresponds to a real principle of effective AI prompting. By filling in each section, you are not just generating output; you are learning the anatomy of a good prompt and building the habit of thinking about what the AI actually needs to do its job well.
What it isn't
This is not a one-click prompt generator. It will not write a complete prompt from a single sentence. It asks you to think, describe your situation, and make choices — because that thinking is the skill we are trying to build together. The more you put in, the more useful the output.
Tips for best results
Start with a seed prompt if you are new to the tool — they fill in many fields automatically and give you a working example to adapt. Pay attention to the Role and Context fields: these are the most commonly skipped and the most impactful. In the Style step, you do not need to set everything — a single tone or format choice is often enough. The Modifiers step is the most underused part of prompting; spend time here once you are comfortable with the basics.
A note on seed prompts and style settings
Some seed prompts already include style, tone, or format instructions baked into their text. This is intentional — those instructions are crafted for that specific task. You can leave them as they are, or use the Style step to override them with simpler options. If both are set, the Style step settings will be added to the assembled prompt alongside the seed prompt text — you may want to remove the duplicated instructions from the task field manually in that case.
The text input windows
Step 5 gives you four input windows. The first — Text to Work On — is where you paste anything the AI needs to read or act on directly, such as a draft for proofreading or an article to summarise. The Style Example window lets you show the AI a piece of writing whose voice or style you want it to match. The Avoid window is for describing what you do not want — this is one of the most overlooked prompting techniques and often makes a bigger difference than positive instructions alone. The final window is for few-shot examples: sample outputs that show the AI what good looks like.
Saving your work
Use the Save button in the preview panel or the Review step to save any prompt to your personal library. Your library is stored in this browser — it will persist between sessions but is tied to this device. Use the Export button in the library to back up your prompts as a JSON file, and Import to restore them on another device or after clearing your browser data.