Yes, AI can whip up a function in seconds but if you don’t understand the code it spits out, you’re just rolling the dice. I was seeing devs blindly accept AI output because they’d never wrestled with the underlying concepts themselves.
LeetPrompt is an answer: a sandbox where you still need real coding insight(types, pointers, concurrency) but you express that insight as a prompt. If you don’t grasp the refactor, the AI won’t either. It’s the best of both worlds: you sharpen fundamental skills and learn to steer models with surgical precision.
Hey, I checked out your website—looks great! Just wanted to share some honest feedback. I think you should hold off on going too deep into development right now. Instead, treat this as your MVP and focus first on getting real customers.
This is a common trap many founders (myself included) fall into—building out the full product before validating if there's a real market fit. Get users, collect feedback, and then iterate. That’s the fastest and most efficient path forward.
I’m also a founder—still learning, definitely not a veteran—but I’ve made this mistake myself, so just sharing what I’ve picked up.
Would love to learn from you too! If you have any ideas on how to get early users, let’s exchange notes. Maybe we can even collaborate on a project sometime.
Best of luck!
Good idea man.
Nice logo too !
My belief is that the hero section should more than a banner.
Show a clip/image of the final product.
Or better even consider a sandbox.
BUT the key question to consider here is...who is your target audience. Zone in on that. My hunch: non-tech people that are just to build with prompt engineering.