Mono Workbench
Developer surfaces that feel technical without terminal cosplay.
Create a Mono Workbench pattern for an AI-generated interface. It should help with developer surfaces that feel technical without terminal cosplay. Use a restrained black, white, and gray visual style, strong hierarchy, and product-grade spacing. The interaction should feel technical, practical, and easy to scan.
Do not make the mono workbench flashy, noisy, over-animated, or decorative for its own sake. Avoid random glow, heavy gradients, excessive borders, oversized type, unclear hierarchy, and generic SaaS filler.
{
"id": "mono-workbench",
"category": "styles",
"trigger": "style page",
"target": "mono workbench",
"duration": "160ms",
"easing": "ease-out",
"feeling": [
"technical",
"practical",
"precise"
],
"palette": [
"black",
"white",
"gray"
]
}
Usage notes
Short guidance for humans and AI tools before copying the pattern.
Use Mono Workbench when you need developer surfaces that feel technical without terminal cosplay. It works best when the interface needs clarity before spectacle.
Do not make the mono workbench flashy, noisy, over-animated, or decorative for its own sake. Avoid random glow, heavy gradients, excessive borders, oversized type, unclear hierarchy, and generic SaaS filler.
Create a Mono Workbench pattern for an AI-generated interface. It should help with developer surfaces that feel technical without terminal cosplay. Use a restrained black, white, and gray visual style, strong hierarchy, and product-grade spacing. The interaction should feel technical, practical, and easy to scan.