THE PERSON WHO CREATED CLAUDE CODE SAYS HE DOESN’T PROMPT CLAUDE ANYMORE.
Boris Cherny builds loops that prompt Claude, check its work, and decide what it should do next.
That is probably the simplest explanation of loop engineering I have heard.
For years, we focused on writing the perfect prompt. But even a great prompt usually produces one result and then stops.
A loop builds a process around that prompt.
It gives the agent a goal, lets it work, evaluates the result, remembers what happened, and decides whether to retry, use another tool, continue to the next step, or ask a human for help.
You are no longer babysitting every action inside the chat. You design the rules that keep the work moving after the first instruction.
That is the real shift from using AI as a chatbot to building systems around it.
The article below breaks loop engineering into 10 practical patterns and explains where each one is useful👇
ONE SELFIE IS NOW ENOUGH TO PUT YOURSELF INSIDE A SPIDER-MAN SCENE.
No costume.
No green screen.
No camera crew.
The workflow starts with a normal photo.
Higgsfield turns it into a character sheet, giving the model a consistent reference for your face, clothes and appearance from different angles.
The intro is generated as a short 4-second shot: you sit on the edge of a window high above the city.
The second prompt continues the scene for another 15 seconds. You lose balance, fall from the building and turn into Spider-Man mid-air.
Generate both parts separately, combine them in any video editor, and a single photo becomes a complete cinematic sequence.
You are no longer asking an AI model to invent everything inside one prompt and hoping it remembers your character. You can build the scene shot by shot while keeping the same person throughout it.
And Spider-Man is only one example.
You can use the same workflow to put yourself inside almost any film, game or anime scene you can describe.
Read the full article below👇