Skip to main content

Create, Improve, and Evaluate with AI

At a glance

  • Plan: All plans
  • Best for: Workspace owners
  • Where to find it: New -> Create with AI, Prompt editor, Prompt detail -> Variants / Evaluate

Key points

  • Create with AI asks for goal, audience, context, tone, constraints, and output type to draft a usable starting point.
  • AI Evaluate scores clarity, specificity, and safety, then suggests a revised draft you can keep separate from the original.

What this feature does

PrompX includes AI helpers for both creation and refinement. You can draft a new prompt from a goal, improve a prompt you already wrote, or evaluate whether a saved prompt is clear and safe enough to reuse.

Why it is useful

AI features are most useful when they speed up a decision instead of replacing it. PrompX keeps the output editable, comparable, and easy to save as a draft rather than forcing you to overwrite working prompts blindly.

How to use it

  1. Use Create with AI from the New menu when you have a goal but do not want to start from a blank page.
  2. In the prompt editor, use AI Fill Metadata to improve title, description, category, and tags based on the prompt and sample output.
  3. Use Suggest in the prompt editor when you want clearer wording or a stronger structure for the prompt text itself.
  4. Focus the Tags field to review AI tag suggestions when PrompX surfaces them for the current prompt.
  5. Open a saved prompt and choose Variants to generate alternative versions for goals such as concise, specific, creative, or safer output.
  6. Choose Evaluate to score the prompt and optionally test it against sample cases written as input | expected style | expected constraints.
  7. Use any recommended result as a draft first, then keep or discard it after review.

Tips

  • Write concrete goals and constraints before using AI tools. Better input gives you better drafts.
  • Variants are useful when you want several strategic approaches without losing the original wording.
  • Evaluation is strongest when you give it test cases based on real work, not abstract examples.

Common use cases

  • Creating a first draft for a workflow you have never formalized before.
  • Checking whether a prompt is specific enough before sharing it with a team.
  • Generating safer or more concise versions of an existing prompt for different audiences.