What it is
Prompt Café is a minimal web interface for composing and organizing text prompts using reusable components described on the page as ingredients, styles, projects and stack entries. The visible content presents a workspace that emphasizes assembling smaller prompt parts into larger prompt constructs and provides controls to manipulate those constructs. The page surface includes action labels such as "Surprise me", "Copy" and "Build in", a theme toggle and a feedback link, and it displays counts for available Ingredients, Projects, Styles and Stack items. The site’s copy indicates a focus on speeding up the process of producing prompts for application-building workflows, and it includes an affordance to request prompts or leave feedback about the prompts or experience.
Key features
The content identifies a modular composition model where users combine named elements (Ingredients, Styles, Projects, Stack) to form prompts; the interface shows counters for those element types. It exposes a randomization or suggestion control labeled "Surprise me" to produce alternative prompt combinations and a "Copy" control to place assembled prompts onto the clipboard. A control labeled "Build in" suggests an action to transition assembled prompts into a target environment or workflow. The page also includes a theme toggle for visual preference and an explicit feedback/request mechanism allowing users to ask for prompts or report input. Overall the visible features center on assembly, quick variation, and simple export/transfer of prompt text.
Use cases
Based on the content, Prompt Café is intended for users who need to assemble and iterate on text prompts as part of building or prototyping applications. It suits workflows that benefit from reusing discrete prompt components and experimenting with different styles or stacks through quick randomization or copying. The feedback/request option supports collaborative or iterative prompt refinement, and the item counters help track available prompt assets across projects. The interface appears aimed at speeding prompt-driven tasks such as creating application prompts, testing prompt variations, and organizing prompt libraries for repeated use.