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      • User Interface
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  • AI Concepts
    • Context
    • Tokenization
    • Prompt Engineering
    • Temperature
    • Max Tokens
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    • System Prompt
    • Persona
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    • Hallucination
    • Model Bias
    • Embedding
    • Latency
    • User Intent
    • Multimodal AI
    • Safety Layers
    • Chain of Thought
    • Prompt Templates
    • Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG)
  • Introduction to Prompting
    • Beginner's Prompting Strategies
      • Understanding the Purpose of a Prompt
      • Be Specific and Clear
      • Using Contextual Information
      • Direct vs. Open-Ended Prompts
      • Step-by-Step Instructions
      • Role-Based Prompts
      • Sequential Prompts
      • Multi-Step Questions
      • Incorporating Examples
    • Common Prompting Mistakes to Avoid
      • Being Too Vague or Ambiguous
      • Overloading with Multiple Questions
      • Ignoring Context Limitations
      • Not Specifying the Desired Output
      • Lack of Iteration and Refinement
      • Neglecting to Set the Right Tone or Role
      • Using Jargon or Complex Language Unnecessarily
      • Ignoring Feedback from the AI
      • Overly Long or Short Prompts
      • Page 6
      • Page 5
      • Page 4
      • Page 3
      • Page 2
      • Page 1
    • Output Formatting Techniques
      • Using Headings and Subheadings
      • Bulleted and Numbered Lists
      • Paragraph Structure
      • Tables and Charts
      • Direct Answers vs. Detailed Explanations
      • Incorporating Summaries and Conclusions
    • Leveraging Formatting for Clarity
      • Highlighting Key Points
      • Guiding the AI on Tone and Style
      • Requesting Examples or Case Studies
      • Formatting for Different Audiences
      • Using Questions to Clarify Information
      • Prompting for Step-by-Step Guides
      • Customizing Responses for Presentation or Reports
      • Avoiding Over-Complicated Formatting
  • Types of Prompts
    • Direct Prompts
    • Instructional Prompts
    • Conversational Prompts
    • Contextual Prompts
    • Example-Based Prompts
    • Reflective or Feedback Prompts
    • Multi-Step Prompts
    • Open-Ended Prompts
    • Role-Based Prompts
    • Comparative Prompts
    • Conditional Prompts
    • Summarization prompts
    • Exploratory Prompts
    • Problem-Solving Prompts
    • Clarification Prompts
    • Sequential Prompts
    • Hypothetical Prompts
    • Ethical or Judgment-Based Prompts
    • Diagnostic Prompts
    • Instructional design prompts
    • Page 8
    • Page 7
  • Advanced Prompting Techniques
    • Zero-Shot
    • Few-Shot
    • Chain-of-Thought
    • Meta Prompting
    • Self-Consistency
    • Generated Knowledge
    • Prompt Chaining
    • Tree of Thoughts (ToT)
    • Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG)
    • Automatic Prompt Engineer (APE)
    • Active Prompt
    • Directional Stimulus
  • Live Examples
    • Legal
      • Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA)
      • Employment Contract
      • Lease Agreement
      • Service Agreement
      • Sales Agreement
    • Zero-Shot Prompting
    • Few-Shot Prompting
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  1. AI Chat Tools
  2. Claude - Anthropic

User Interface

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Last updated 5 months ago

  1. The camera icon allows user to capture a screen shot of your computer. Click on it to take a screenshot

Once the screen short is taken it will be attached your chat.

Type in "Describe the attached screen"

  1. Star the current chat. Starring a chat will store the chat under "Starred" chat list

  2. Chat Settings icon will launch the 'Chat Controls' popup on the right side.

Hover over the left side of the window and left side menu will open up. Here you will find the history of your chats and the Starred chats

Hovering over your name or email brings up the menu.

Settings Menu

Settings - Profile.

This allows you set the basic information of your profile

What personal preferences should Claude consider in responses?

When setting personal preferences for Claude or any AI assistant, it’s essential to tailor the settings for your specific needs while keeping its versatility intact for other tasks. Here are some key considerations:


Personal Preferences for Responses

  1. Tone of Voice:

    • Formal: For professional or client-facing interactions.

    • Casual: For informal conversations or brainstorming.

    • Empathetic: For sensitive or customer support tasks.

  2. Detail Level:

    • Concise: For quick answers or summaries.

    • Detailed: For in-depth explanations, teaching, or documentation.

  3. Clarity:

    • Ensure responses are straightforward and avoid overly technical jargon unless requested.

    • Use easy-to-understand language for audiences unfamiliar with the topic.

  4. Cultural and Contextual Relevance:

    • Consider preferences like regional idioms, local etiquette, or specific terms (e.g., use British English vs. American English if needed).

  5. Formatting:

    • Ensure responses are well-structured with proper headings, bullet points, or numbered lists if required.

    • Include Markdown or HTML formatting for code or content creation tasks.

  6. Focus Areas:

    • Highlight certain areas of importance (e.g., prioritizing creativity, analytical thinking, or ethical considerations).


Training and Customization Tips

  1. Set Primary Use Cases: Define what Claude will be used for primarily, such as:

    • Content creation.

    • Technical assistance.

    • Customer service.

    • Research and brainstorming.

  2. General Instructions:

    • Inclusivity: Ensure responses are neutral and unbiased.

    • Politeness: Always maintain a courteous tone.

    • Avoid Assumptions: Ask for clarification when the user's intent isn’t clear.

  3. Adaptability for Other Tasks:

    • Train Claude to identify when a task is unrelated to the primary use case.

    • Ensure it can shift between contexts smoothly (e.g., moving from technical queries to creative writing).


Example Instruction Set for Claude

  • “Respond in a professional and empathetic tone for client-related tasks.”

  • “For brainstorming or creative tasks, adopt a more casual, engaging tone.”

  • “Use concise answers for FAQs, but provide detailed explanations for in-depth queries.”

  • “Always prioritize clear structure and formatting in responses.”

  • “When in doubt about the user's intent, ask follow-up questions.”

Upgrade to Claude Prod

Free Claude data for training

According the Claude's documentation, FREE and PRO version user data is not used for training purpose unless you submitted feedback by clicking on thumps up or down.

I would like to input sensitive data into Free Claude.ai or Claude Pro. Who can view my conversations?Updated this week

Giving feedback by pressing on thumbs up or down may trigger claude to use your prompt and response data for AI model training

By default, we will not use your prompts and conversations from Free Claude.ai or Claude Pro to train our models. There are two instances in which we may use your prompts and conversations to train our models: (1) if you give us explicit permission by submitting feedback through the thumbs up/down feature or by reaching out to us with a request, and (2) where your prompts and conversations are flagged for trust and safety review, we may use or analyze those conversations to improve our ability to detect and enforce violations, including to train trust and safety classifiers in order to make our services safer. Only a limited number of staff members have access to conversation data and they will only access this data for explicit business purposes.

Usage Policy
I would like to input sensitive data into Free Claude.ai or Claude Pro. Who can view my conversations? | Anthropic Help Center
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