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isityettime an hour ago

I broadly agree with the article. But I think it's wrong about the failures of past command-line interface design. The author writes:

> There's a deeper assumption underneath all of it. The classic Command Line Interface Guidelines treat a human at a terminal as the primary user, with agents as a tolerated secondary audience. That's no longer the right default. Cloudflare puts it directly in their post: "Increasingly, agents are the primary customer of our APIs." Their whole schema approach is built around that. HeyGen launched their CLI with "agent" in the marketing copy. Design for agents first, and humans benefit. Designing for humans first and bolting on agent support is what produces the inconsistent, prompt-prone, stdout-only CLIs the first five principles exist to correct.

I don't think that's true at all. If you're someone who has lived in the terminal for a few years, you will have a sense of taste that naturally leads you to do the right thing. If you've used Git and systemctl and you know why p7zip feels alien on Unix and you have cursed a command where `-h` doesn't mean help, nobody needs to tell you basically any of this. If you've ever met jq, you don't need anyone to tell you that `--json` is a very valuable thing to have. You also don't need anyone to tell you what a uniform hierarchy of flags and options with different scopes should look like; if you've used a program that uses subcommands, even a shitty one, you know what a good one should look like.

When command-line tools (or inconsistent collections thereof) are difficult for AI in the ways the article describes, it's because they're shit. When command-line tools are shit, it's because nobody is taking the design of those interfaces seriously at all, typically some combination of:

  - the interface isn't "designed" at all, it's just naively evolved.
  - you're leaving writing a CLI tool to someone who tolerates the command-line but doesn't live in it
  - the object is treated as only a human/interactive interface or only a programming interface when in fact it's always both
  - your suite of tools has diffuse ownership and nobody thinks command-line interfaces are important enough to have standards for
If you treat a GUI as unseriously as that, it invariably turns to a pile of shit, too!

Anybody who ought to be writing one has already internalized all the right norms. Most of it comes for free from living in the shell. Put one person in charge and it'll be uniform. If you can't, writing a style guide and enforcing it with linters and tests is a great idea. But this is just taking command-line interfaces seriously as interfaces. It has pretty much nothing to do with AI except at the edges (e.g., json-flavored companion to --help).

olcay_ 5 minutes ago | parent [-]

⅑3²