// Transform vague prompts into precise, well-structured specifications using EARS (Easy Approach to Requirements Syntax) methodology. This skill should be used when users provide loose requirements, ambiguous feature descriptions, or need to enhance prompts for AI-generated code, products, or documents. Triggers include requests to "optimize my prompt", "improve this requirement", "make this more specific", or when raw requirements lack detail and structure.
| name | prompt-optimizer |
| description | Transform vague prompts into precise, well-structured specifications using EARS (Easy Approach to Requirements Syntax) methodology. This skill should be used when users provide loose requirements, ambiguous feature descriptions, or need to enhance prompts for AI-generated code, products, or documents. Triggers include requests to "optimize my prompt", "improve this requirement", "make this more specific", or when raw requirements lack detail and structure. |
Optimize vague prompts into precise, actionable specifications using EARS (Easy Approach to Requirements Syntax) - a Rolls-Royce methodology for transforming natural language into structured, testable requirements.
Methodology inspired by: This skill's approach to combining EARS with domain theory grounding was inspired by 阿星AI工作室 (A-Xing AI Studio), which demonstrated practical EARS application for prompt enhancement.
Four-layer enhancement process:
Apply when:
Identify weaknesses:
Convert requirements to EARS patterns. See references/ears_syntax.md for complete syntax rules.
Five core patterns:
The system shall <action>When <trigger>, the system shall <action>While <state>, the system shall <action>If <condition>, the system shall <action>If <condition>, the system shall prevent <unwanted action>Quick example:
Before: "Create a reminder app with task management"
After (EARS):
1. When user creates a task, the system shall guide decomposition into executable sub-tasks
2. When task deadline is within 30 minutes AND user has not started, the system shall send notification with sound alert
3. When user completes a sub-task, the system shall update progress and provide positive feedback
Transformation checklist:
Match requirements to established frameworks. See references/domain_theories.md for full catalog.
Common domain mappings:
Selection process:
Generate specific examples with real data:
Examples must be realistic, specific, varied (success/error/edge cases), and testable.
Structure using the standard framework:
# Role
[Specific expert role with domain expertise]
## Skills
- [Core capability 1]
- [Core capability 2]
[List 5-8 skills aligned with domain theories]
## Workflows
1. [Phase 1] - [Key activities]
2. [Phase 2] - [Key activities]
[Complete step-by-step process]
## Examples
[Concrete examples with real data, not placeholders]
## Formats
[Precise output specifications:
- File types, structure requirements
- Design/styling expectations
- Technical constraints
- Deliverable checklist]
Quality criteria:
Output in structured format:
## Original Requirement
[User's vague requirement]
**Identified Issues:**
- [Issue 1: e.g., "Lacks specific trigger conditions"]
- [Issue 2: e.g., "No measurable success criteria"]
## EARS Transformation
[Numbered list of EARS-formatted requirements]
## Domain & Theories
**Primary Domain:** [e.g., Authentication Security]
**Applicable Theories:**
- **[Theory 1]** - [Brief relevance]
- **[Theory 2]** - [Brief relevance]
## Enhanced Prompt
[Complete Role/Skills/Workflows/Examples/Formats prompt]
---
**How to use:**
[Brief guidance on applying the prompt]
For complex scenarios, see references/advanced_techniques.md:
Do's: ✅ Break down compound requirements (one EARS statement per requirement) ✅ Specify measurable criteria (numbers, timeframes, percentages) ✅ Include error/edge cases ✅ Ground in established theories ✅ Use concrete examples with real data
Don'ts: ❌ Avoid vague language ("fast", "user-friendly") ❌ Don't assume implicit knowledge ❌ Don't mix multiple actions in one statement ❌ Don't use placeholders in examples
Load these reference files as needed:
references/ears_syntax.md - Complete EARS syntax rules, all 5 patterns, transformation guidelines, benefitsreferences/domain_theories.md - 40+ theories mapped to 10 domains (productivity, UX, gamification, learning, e-commerce, security, etc.)references/examples.md - Four complete transformation examples (procrastination app, e-commerce product page, learning dashboard, password reset security) with before/after comparisons and reusable templatereferences/advanced_techniques.md - Multi-stakeholder requirements, non-functional specs, complex conditional logic patternsWhen to load references:
ears_syntax.mddomain_theories.mdexamples.mdadvanced_techniques.md