I analysed how the creator of OpenClaw uses AI coding agents. Here are top takeaways: 1. Runs 3-8 agents at the same time — each in its own terminal window. Lets them work for hours without checking on them. 2. Gives agents testing tools — so they can check their own work instead of waiting for him to verify everything. 3. Short prompts — 1-2 sentences max. The AI reads your code anyway, no need for long explanations. 4. Screenshots over descriptions — "fix the padding" + a screenshot beats writing a paragraph explaining what's wrong. 5. Command-line tools over plugins — AI already knows how to use git, database commands, etc. No need to add extra tools. 6. "Write tests right after the feature" — the agent just built it, it knows what might break. Don't start a new chat to ask for tests later. 7. Think about scope first — before starting, estimate how big the change is. If it's taking too long, stop and ask for a status update. 8. Commits straight to main — only uses branches when unsure about big architectural decisions.