Show HN: Specific (YC F25) – Build backends with specifications instead of code
9 comments
·October 15, 2025Yondle
I'm struggling to understand who or what this is for. The example shows creating an API, which is something that a technical person would understand the requirements for, but then it completely hides the generated output that the person just has to just... trust I guess. I feel this type of product has already been made redundant by 'agentic development environments' like Warp. (which have all the same issues lol)
fabianlindfors
That's a fair take. We are planning on showing the output code to remove that need for trust, but focused on other things for the open beta.
As for who it's for, we are targeting technical people who might know how to build backends in code, but we believe it can be done more productively through specs. The specs remove the need for boilerplate code and more closely match the business requirements of the system. One common example of this amongst our users is building third-party integrations. That can require a lot of boilerplate code and libraries to achieve. In Specific, it can be as easy as linking out to API docs.
michaelmior
I'm curious if you do anything to control how the code evolves over time. Test suites are often incomplete and it's possible that behavior that is not fully specified may be unintentionally relied on.
If Specific regenerates code from the spec each time (which I'm not sure it does), there's the potential for different code each time even for parts of the spec that haven't changed. This seems like a nightmare for maintainability and debugability.
fabianlindfors
That's a good question!
> If Specific regenerates code from the spec each time (which I'm not sure it does), there's the potential for different code each time even for parts of the spec that haven't changed
It doesn't. When the spec changes, the coding agent takes the diff and turns it into the equivalent change to the codebase. The tests also run each time so that the coding agent does cause a regression as part of this. Although as you say, test suites are often incomplete. We are aiming to make it easier to build complete test suites in Specific than in regular code though because they are a part of the spec and the agent can you help write them as well.
We haven't done much yet in this area but I'm quite excited about how to evolve the codebase over time. I think we have an advantage in that a system evolving also means the specs are evolving and growing. We can maintain a loose mapping behind the scenes between specs and code for the coding agent, to give it the right context and keep code changes localised even as a system grows large. We can also refactor incrementally as we go as given that it becomes the job of the coding agent, instead of a human that might put it off.
e38383
The page is a bit sparse ;)
What will the pricing be after the beta? And what are you exactly offering? Only a database or also authentication or storage?
Can you maybe compare it to something established like Supabase?
wslh
Sorry but looking forward to the open source version. With all due respect to your work I assume that what you are building will be quickly reproduced as OSS. Also, for a backend I think a typical entity relationship definition or declarative DSL are better than AI (e.g. deterministic and less error/security prone).
fabianlindfors
That's fair! We have considered how we could offer an open-source version of Specific but haven't found a good model for it yet. We are definitely open to it though!
Curious to hear more about the entity relationship definition. The schema for the entities and relationships is naturally an important part of it but how do you define the logic needed around them? For example integrations with external APIs
wslh
Thank you for your kind reply. Now that you mention integrations with external APIs, I think it's fair to say that you should highlight that upfront in your webpage because it's a more clear pain point than building other parts of backends.
My two cents: in my experience with integrations there are many issues that you can't control yourself because third-party APIs are buggy, incomplete, etc. For top APIs there are, in general, good wrappers with tests to use.
fabianlindfors
> I think it's fair to say that you should highlight that upfront in your webpage because it's a more clear pain point than building other parts of backends.
Good point! We should do that :)
> My two cents: in my experience with integrations there are many issues that you can't control yourself because third-party APIs are buggy, incomplete, etc
Yes, I have actually spent a large portion of my career building such integrations and Specific has grown out of that. In my experience, working with specifications makes it much easier to focus on the behaviour of the API you are integrating with, instead of the code architecture or boilerplate behind your integration.
Hi folks! Iman and I (Fabian) have been building Specific for a while now and are finally opening up our public beta.
Specific is a platform for building backend APIs and services entirely through natural-language specifications and tests, without writing code. We then automatically turn your specs into a working system and deploy it for you, along with any infrastructure needed.
We know a lot of developers who have already adopted spec-driven development to focus on high-level design and let coding agents take care of implementation. We are attempting to take this even further by making the specs themselves the source of truth. Of course, we can’t blindly trust coding agents to follow the spec, so we also support adding tests that will run to ensure the system behaves as expected and to avoid regressions.
There is so much ground to cover, so we are focusing on a smaller set of initial features that in our experience should cover a large portion of backends:
- An HTTP server for each project. Authentication can be added by simply stating in the spec how you want to protect your endpoint.
- A database automatically spun up and schema configured if the spec indicates persistence is needed.
- External APIs can be called. You can even link out to API docs in your specs.
You currently can’t see the generated code, but we are working on enabling it. Of course, we don’t claim any ownership of the generated code and will gladly let you export it and continue building elsewhere.
Specific is free to try and we are really eager to hear your feedback on it!
Try it here: https://app.specific.dev