I started using ChatGPT and Claude, then Claude Code the second each tech stack became available. I iteratively cajoled as much productivity as I could from it. Until October 2025 I was adamantly against it as a real tool for complex software projects.
Then Opus 4 -> 4.5 arrived and as we all know, changed the world.
But during those earlier times with minuscule context windows and many hallucinations, I still extracted evidence of what could be accomplished. I stored over a thousand work summaries from several projects and then in January 2026 I worked with Claude Code to build DevArch on the principles it could discern from those work summaries. Obviously I corralled Claude into developing a set of guardrails that I felt encapsulated what I describe as productive architecture and software engineering from a continuous improvement stance.
DevArch is now at 4.0 and installs on any Mac, Linux, or WSL OS. There's a 14-day free trial so you can download it and see for yourself.
If you're serious about being productive and generating high quality code, then I believe DevArch is a great asset to your toolkit.
Not a very attractive option.
And "my workflow" isn't a workflow. It really allows you to work however you want...with DevArch watching everything and injecting questions when it senses you're straying from your mission. And it will push you to wrap up, commit and push, clear the deck, then recap and repeat.