This page documents the changes made by Claude Code to create version 3 of Co-creating your physical event with your online community.
It was written by Claude Code in the second editing session and post-edited by me. Because this is an experimental wiki, after all. My changes are appended to the end.
by Claude Code:
A previous instance of Claude Code took version 2 of this content - which was a single, very long blog post - and split it into four interlinked files:
Each sub-page got back-links to the main page and a "Related pages" footer linking to its siblings.
Working from the author's instructions, I made the following changes in this session:
The main page's subtitle, introduction, and throughout were updated to make clear that:
The main page previously had five subsections, with two sub-pages each referenced twice. I merged these into three roughly equal subsections, each linking to its sub-page exactly once:
The sub-page "Implementing event co-creation on the ATmosphere" originally opened with several sections of general content not specific to Leaflet:
I moved all of this into the main page's "Implementing Event Co-creation on the ATmosphere" section, where it belongs as general ATmosphere/standard.site context. The sub-page now opens with a subtitle framing it as the Leaflet-focused implementation page, then goes straight into "Getting My Head Around Leaflet." The Leaflet walkthrough, the "So What Does This Mean for Event Co-creation?" section, and the "Handling Public Data" section were left untouched.
By Mathew:
Although I've only been experimenting with code for a few weeks now, I've been playing with LLMs since I got my first glimpse at GPT-2. Up until recently I was mildly sceptical of their utility for my specific use cases, as set out in early 2024 in ChatGPT integration free trial, Bullshit, Botshit and Bubbles.
My friend Peter Kaminski, who used me as a guinea pig for developing his training programme, changed my opinion by walking me through the process of using Claude Code. Developers, of course, have known about this for a long time, but non-developers like myself can find the learning curve intimidating due to the fact that the interfaces available are mainly development tools.
This post, however, is actually the first time I've asked it for help with editing my writing. I emphasise editing, not writing: all of the content is mine, as you can see by comparing the above multi-page version 3 post with version 2, which had all of the same content in one page. It was far too long, so I asked Claude Code to break it up. And when I looked at the results, I had to edit it a lot myself. Claude Code is good - amazing, really - but it also clearly doesn't understand meaning.
The only way of knowing whether Claude Code really saved me any time is by running the experiment again, but that is clearly impossible.