This quickstart guide will have you using AI-powered coding assistance in a few minutes. By the end, you’ll understand how to use Claude Code for common development tasks.
Before you begin
Make sure you have:
- A terminal or command prompt open
- If you’ve never used the terminal before, check out the terminal guide
- A code project to work with
- A Claude subscription (Pro, Max, Teams, or Enterprise), Claude Console account, or access through a supported cloud provider
Step 1: Install Claude Code
To install Claude Code, use one of the following methods:
Native Install (Recommended)
Homebrew
WinGet
macOS, Linux, WSL:
curl -fsSL https://claude.ai/install.sh | bash
Windows PowerShell:
irm https://claude.ai/install.ps1 | iex
Windows CMD:
curl -fsSL https://claude.ai/install.cmd -o install.cmd && install.cmd && del install.cmd
Windows requires Git for Windows. Install it first if you don’t have it.
brew install --cask claude-code
winget install Anthropic.ClaudeCode
Step 2: Log in to your account
Claude Code requires an account to use. When you start an interactive session with the claude command, you’ll need to log in:
claude
# You'll be prompted to log in on first use
/login
# Follow the prompts to log in with your account
You can log in using any of these account types:
- Claude Pro, Max, Teams, or Enterprise (recommended)
- Claude Console (API access with pre-paid credits). On first login, a “Claude Code” workspace is automatically created in the Console for centralized cost tracking.
- Amazon Bedrock, Google Vertex AI, or Microsoft Foundry (enterprise cloud providers)
Once logged in, your credentials are stored and you won’t need to log in again. To switch accounts later, use the /login command.
Step 3: Start your first session
Open your terminal in any project directory and start Claude Code:
cd /path/to/your/project
claude
You’ll see the Claude Code welcome screen with your session information, recent conversations, and latest updates. Type /help for available commands or /resume to continue a previous conversation.
Step 4: Ask your first question
Let’s start with understanding your codebase. Try one of these commands:
what does this project do?
Claude will analyze your files and provide a summary. You can also ask more specific questions:
what technologies does this project use?
where is the main entry point?
explain the folder structure
You can also ask Claude about its own capabilities:
what can Claude Code do?
how do I create custom skills in Claude Code?
can Claude Code work with Docker?
Step 5: Make your first code change
Now let’s make Claude Code do some actual coding. Try a simple task:
add a hello world function to the main file
Claude Code will:
- Find the appropriate file
- Show you the proposed changes
- Ask for your approval
- Make the edit
Step 6: Use Git with Claude Code
Claude Code makes Git operations conversational:
what files have I changed?
commit my changes with a descriptive message
You can also prompt for more complex Git operations:
create a new branch called feature/quickstart
show me the last 5 commits
help me resolve merge conflicts
Step 7: Fix a bug or add a feature
Claude is proficient at debugging and feature implementation. Describe what you want in natural language:
add input validation to the user registration form
Or fix existing issues:
there's a bug where users can submit empty forms - fix it
Claude Code will:
- Locate the relevant code
- Understand the context
- Implement a solution
- Run tests if available
Step 8: Test out other common workflows
There are a number of ways to work with Claude: Refactor code
refactor the authentication module to use async/await instead of callbacks
Write tests
write unit tests for the calculator functions
Update documentation
update the README with installation instructions
Code review
review my changes and suggest improvements
Essential commands
Here are the most important commands for daily use:
| Command | What it does | Example |
|---|---|---|
claude | Start interactive mode | claude |
claude "task" | Run a one-time task | claude "fix the build error" |
claude -p "query" | Run one-off query, then exit | claude -p "explain this function" |
claude -c | Continue most recent conversation in current directory | claude -c |
claude -r | Resume a previous conversation | claude -r |
claude commit | Create a Git commit | claude commit |
/clear | Clear conversation history | /clear |
/help | Show available commands | /help |
exit or Ctrl+C | Exit Claude Code | exit |
See the CLI reference for a complete list of commands.
Pro tips for beginners
For more, see best practices and common workflows.
What’s next?
Now that you’ve learned the basics, explore more advanced features:
Getting help
- In Claude Code: Type
/helpor ask “how do I…” - Documentation: You’re here! Browse other guides
- Community: Join our Discord for tips and support