**I stopped explaining prompts and started marking explicit intent** *SoftPrompt-IR: a simpler, clearer way to write prompts* from a German mechatronics engineer
By Holidays in Europe / December 22, 2025 / No Comments / Uncategorized
Revolutionizing Prompt Design: From Explanation to Explicit Intent Marking
By a German Mechatronics Engineer Embracing Simplified Prompting Techniques
In the rapidly evolving landscape of AI and large language models (LLMs), crafting effective prompts remains a key challenge. Traditional advice often emphasizes clarity through verbose instructions, repetition, and strong phrasing. While such strategies can be effective, they tend to be noisy, brittle, and can complicate the model’s understanding.
A Paradigm Shift: From Explaining to Marking Intent
Instead of embedding intent within lengthy prose, a more streamlined approach involves explicitly marking and structuring your instructions. This method emphasizes clarity by directly indicating priorities and constraints, making prompts more efficient and less ambiguous.
An Illustrative Example
Conventional prompting:
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Please avoid flowery language.
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Try not to use clichés.
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Don’t over-explain things.
Revised with explicit intent markings:
plaintext
!~> AVOID_FLOWERY_STYLE
~> AVOID_CLICHES
~> LIMIT_EXPLANATION
Benefits of this approach:
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Same underlying intent.
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Reduced verbosity.
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Clearer signals to the model.
Understanding the Signaling System
The symbols serve as indicators of importance rather than conveying story or instruction content:
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!(exclamation mark): High Priority / Strong emphasis -
~(tilde): Soft preference or suggestion -
>(greater-than): Global or downstream application
Words serve as tags—simple labels rather than full sentences. Think of this as a form of “Markdown for Intent,” where the structure, not narrative, communicates the core directives.
How This Works Without Additional Training
LLMs are inherently familiar with patterns akin to configuration files, rulesets, feature flags, and weighted instructions. By making intent explicit and structured rather than hidden within natural language, prompts become:
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Less repetitive
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Less ambiguous
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Shorter and more direct
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Less prone to conflicting instructions
Introducing SoftPrompt-IR
This method, which I call SoftPrompt-IR, emphasizes simplicity and safety:
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No new language or jargon
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No need for jailbreak techniques
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No hacking involved
At its core, SoftPrompt-IR focuses on making implicit intent explicit—priorit