We are Learning Podcasts, not affiliated with RTK or its maintainers.
We made a source-guided episode for engineers already using Claude Code or Codex, focused on what RTK changes at the command-output boundary and how the Rust repo is structured: https://youtu.be/5p0f2p9Gn0o
The design point we found most useful while reading the repo was the distinction between prompt-level guidance and a deterministic output proxy. Asking an agent to ignore noisy output still feeds it the noise. RTK tries to move that boundary into local code, with escape hatches for raw output.
learningpodsio•33m ago
We made a source-guided episode for engineers already using Claude Code or Codex, focused on what RTK changes at the command-output boundary and how the Rust repo is structured: https://youtu.be/5p0f2p9Gn0o
The design point we found most useful while reading the repo was the distinction between prompt-level guidance and a deterministic output proxy. Asking an agent to ignore noisy output still feeds it the noise. RTK tries to move that boundary into local code, with escape hatches for raw output.