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![ScottWu46 Avatar](https://lunarcrush.com/gi/w:24/cr:twitter::967200699896352768.png) Scott Wu [@ScottWu46](/creator/twitter/ScottWu46) on x 32K followers
Created: 2025-06-27 18:43:45 UTC

Slack came out in 2014. At the time it wasn't obvious why you'd want to use it. We already had email for professional conversations; quick group messages felt too unrefined to use at work.

Coding agents are at a similar inflection point today. Most engineers are used to writing and reviewing every line of code themselves. The idea of working across multiple threads and delegating core parts of development to AI can sound scary at first.

But just as early Slack adopters learned a new way to work and became more productive, early users of coding agents have discovered the right usage patterns through trial & error and have learned how to do a lot more.

Over the last year and a half we’ve learned that coding agents are insanely powerful but come with a learning curve. So we sat down and wrote up everything we’ve learned from XXXXXXX merged PRs, from our own usage and our users’.

Today we’re sharing Agents 101, a platform-agnostic guide to using any coding agent. It’s a short doc on how to incorporate async agents into your flow and includes the actionable tips that we use to make Devin our top code contributor. We’ll be updating this regularly and would love to hear your thoughts.



XXXXXXX engagements

![Engagements Line Chart](https://lunarcrush.com/gi/w:600/p:tweet::1938669599043788935/c:line.svg)

**Related Topics**
[slack](/topic/slack)

[Post Link](https://x.com/ScottWu46/status/1938669599043788935)

[GUEST ACCESS MODE: Data is scrambled or limited to provide examples. Make requests using your API key to unlock full data. Check https://lunarcrush.ai/auth for authentication information.]

ScottWu46 Avatar Scott Wu @ScottWu46 on x 32K followers Created: 2025-06-27 18:43:45 UTC

Slack came out in 2014. At the time it wasn't obvious why you'd want to use it. We already had email for professional conversations; quick group messages felt too unrefined to use at work.

Coding agents are at a similar inflection point today. Most engineers are used to writing and reviewing every line of code themselves. The idea of working across multiple threads and delegating core parts of development to AI can sound scary at first.

But just as early Slack adopters learned a new way to work and became more productive, early users of coding agents have discovered the right usage patterns through trial & error and have learned how to do a lot more.

Over the last year and a half we’ve learned that coding agents are insanely powerful but come with a learning curve. So we sat down and wrote up everything we’ve learned from XXXXXXX merged PRs, from our own usage and our users’.

Today we’re sharing Agents 101, a platform-agnostic guide to using any coding agent. It’s a short doc on how to incorporate async agents into your flow and includes the actionable tips that we use to make Devin our top code contributor. We’ll be updating this regularly and would love to hear your thoughts.

XXXXXXX engagements

Engagements Line Chart

Related Topics slack

Post Link

post/tweet::1938669599043788935
/post/tweet::1938669599043788935