prompt-engineering-patterns

Master advanced prompt engineering techniques to maximize LLM performance, reliability, and controllability in production. Use when optimizing prompts, improving LLM outputs, or designing production prompt templates.

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Best use case

prompt-engineering-patterns is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt. It is especially useful for teams working in multi. Master advanced prompt engineering techniques to maximize LLM performance, reliability, and controllability in production. Use when optimizing prompts, improving LLM outputs, or designing production prompt templates.

Master advanced prompt engineering techniques to maximize LLM performance, reliability, and controllability in production. Use when optimizing prompts, improving LLM outputs, or designing production prompt templates.

Users should expect a more consistent workflow output, faster repeated execution, and less time spent rewriting prompts from scratch.

Practical example

Example input

Use the "prompt-engineering-patterns" skill to help with this workflow task. Context: Master advanced prompt engineering techniques to maximize LLM performance, reliability, and controllability in production. Use when optimizing prompts, improving LLM outputs, or designing production prompt templates.

Example output

A structured workflow result with clearer steps, more consistent formatting, and an output that is easier to reuse in the next run.

When to use this skill

  • Use this skill when you want a reusable workflow rather than writing the same prompt again and again.

When not to use this skill

  • Do not use this when you only need a one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
  • Do not use it if you cannot install or maintain the related files, repository context, or supporting tools.

Installation

Claude Code / Cursor / Codex

$curl -o ~/.claude/skills/prompt-engineering-patterns/SKILL.md --create-dirs "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aiskillstore/marketplace/main/skills/sickn33/prompt-engineering-patterns/SKILL.md"

Manual Installation

  1. Download SKILL.md from GitHub
  2. Place it in .claude/skills/prompt-engineering-patterns/SKILL.md inside your project
  3. Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill

How prompt-engineering-patterns Compares

Feature / Agentprompt-engineering-patternsStandard Approach
Platform SupportNot specifiedLimited / Varies
Context Awareness High Baseline
Installation ComplexityUnknownN/A

Frequently Asked Questions

What does this skill do?

Master advanced prompt engineering techniques to maximize LLM performance, reliability, and controllability in production. Use when optimizing prompts, improving LLM outputs, or designing production prompt templates.

Where can I find the source code?

You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.

SKILL.md Source

# Prompt Engineering Patterns

Master advanced prompt engineering techniques to maximize LLM performance, reliability, and controllability.

## Do not use this skill when

- The task is unrelated to prompt engineering patterns
- You need a different domain or tool outside this scope

## Instructions

- Clarify goals, constraints, and required inputs.
- Apply relevant best practices and validate outcomes.
- Provide actionable steps and verification.
- If detailed examples are required, open `resources/implementation-playbook.md`.

## Use this skill when

- Designing complex prompts for production LLM applications
- Optimizing prompt performance and consistency
- Implementing structured reasoning patterns (chain-of-thought, tree-of-thought)
- Building few-shot learning systems with dynamic example selection
- Creating reusable prompt templates with variable interpolation
- Debugging and refining prompts that produce inconsistent outputs
- Implementing system prompts for specialized AI assistants

## Core Capabilities

### 1. Few-Shot Learning
- Example selection strategies (semantic similarity, diversity sampling)
- Balancing example count with context window constraints
- Constructing effective demonstrations with input-output pairs
- Dynamic example retrieval from knowledge bases
- Handling edge cases through strategic example selection

### 2. Chain-of-Thought Prompting
- Step-by-step reasoning elicitation
- Zero-shot CoT with "Let's think step by step"
- Few-shot CoT with reasoning traces
- Self-consistency techniques (sampling multiple reasoning paths)
- Verification and validation steps

### 3. Prompt Optimization
- Iterative refinement workflows
- A/B testing prompt variations
- Measuring prompt performance metrics (accuracy, consistency, latency)
- Reducing token usage while maintaining quality
- Handling edge cases and failure modes

### 4. Template Systems
- Variable interpolation and formatting
- Conditional prompt sections
- Multi-turn conversation templates
- Role-based prompt composition
- Modular prompt components

### 5. System Prompt Design
- Setting model behavior and constraints
- Defining output formats and structure
- Establishing role and expertise
- Safety guidelines and content policies
- Context setting and background information

## Quick Start

```python
from prompt_optimizer import PromptTemplate, FewShotSelector

# Define a structured prompt template
template = PromptTemplate(
    system="You are an expert SQL developer. Generate efficient, secure SQL queries.",
    instruction="Convert the following natural language query to SQL:\n{query}",
    few_shot_examples=True,
    output_format="SQL code block with explanatory comments"
)

# Configure few-shot learning
selector = FewShotSelector(
    examples_db="sql_examples.jsonl",
    selection_strategy="semantic_similarity",
    max_examples=3
)

# Generate optimized prompt
prompt = template.render(
    query="Find all users who registered in the last 30 days",
    examples=selector.select(query="user registration date filter")
)
```

## Key Patterns

### Progressive Disclosure
Start with simple prompts, add complexity only when needed:

1. **Level 1**: Direct instruction
   - "Summarize this article"

2. **Level 2**: Add constraints
   - "Summarize this article in 3 bullet points, focusing on key findings"

3. **Level 3**: Add reasoning
   - "Read this article, identify the main findings, then summarize in 3 bullet points"

4. **Level 4**: Add examples
   - Include 2-3 example summaries with input-output pairs

### Instruction Hierarchy
```
[System Context] → [Task Instruction] → [Examples] → [Input Data] → [Output Format]
```

### Error Recovery
Build prompts that gracefully handle failures:
- Include fallback instructions
- Request confidence scores
- Ask for alternative interpretations when uncertain
- Specify how to indicate missing information

## Best Practices

1. **Be Specific**: Vague prompts produce inconsistent results
2. **Show, Don't Tell**: Examples are more effective than descriptions
3. **Test Extensively**: Evaluate on diverse, representative inputs
4. **Iterate Rapidly**: Small changes can have large impacts
5. **Monitor Performance**: Track metrics in production
6. **Version Control**: Treat prompts as code with proper versioning
7. **Document Intent**: Explain why prompts are structured as they are

## Common Pitfalls

- **Over-engineering**: Starting with complex prompts before trying simple ones
- **Example pollution**: Using examples that don't match the target task
- **Context overflow**: Exceeding token limits with excessive examples
- **Ambiguous instructions**: Leaving room for multiple interpretations
- **Ignoring edge cases**: Not testing on unusual or boundary inputs

## Integration Patterns

### With RAG Systems
```python
# Combine retrieved context with prompt engineering
prompt = f"""Given the following context:
{retrieved_context}

{few_shot_examples}

Question: {user_question}

Provide a detailed answer based solely on the context above. If the context doesn't contain enough information, explicitly state what's missing."""
```

### With Validation
```python
# Add self-verification step
prompt = f"""{main_task_prompt}

After generating your response, verify it meets these criteria:
1. Answers the question directly
2. Uses only information from provided context
3. Cites specific sources
4. Acknowledges any uncertainty

If verification fails, revise your response."""
```

## Performance Optimization

### Token Efficiency
- Remove redundant words and phrases
- Use abbreviations consistently after first definition
- Consolidate similar instructions
- Move stable content to system prompts

### Latency Reduction
- Minimize prompt length without sacrificing quality
- Use streaming for long-form outputs
- Cache common prompt prefixes
- Batch similar requests when possible

## Resources

- **references/few-shot-learning.md**: Deep dive on example selection and construction
- **references/chain-of-thought.md**: Advanced reasoning elicitation techniques
- **references/prompt-optimization.md**: Systematic refinement workflows
- **references/prompt-templates.md**: Reusable template patterns
- **references/system-prompts.md**: System-level prompt design
- **assets/prompt-template-library.md**: Battle-tested prompt templates
- **assets/few-shot-examples.json**: Curated example datasets
- **scripts/optimize-prompt.py**: Automated prompt optimization tool

## Success Metrics

Track these KPIs for your prompts:
- **Accuracy**: Correctness of outputs
- **Consistency**: Reproducibility across similar inputs
- **Latency**: Response time (P50, P95, P99)
- **Token Usage**: Average tokens per request
- **Success Rate**: Percentage of valid outputs
- **User Satisfaction**: Ratings and feedback

## Next Steps

1. Review the prompt template library for common patterns
2. Experiment with few-shot learning for your specific use case
3. Implement prompt versioning and A/B testing
4. Set up automated evaluation pipelines
5. Document your prompt engineering decisions and learnings

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