Slash trigger anywhere
Works in <input>, <textarea>, and contenteditable. ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, plain forms, even your inbox.
Quick Prompt is a tiny Chrome sidebar that holds every LLM prompt you've written more than once. Type / in any text field on the web — ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, your inbox — and pick one with one keystroke.
LLM prompts, sure — but also email signatures, support replies, your shipping address, code snippets you keep retyping, meeting boilerplate, the URL of that one Notion doc, the disclaimer your legal team wrote, a wallet address, your bio. If you've ever copy-pasted something twice, save it. Type / anywhere — Quick Prompt drops it in.
What is it
If you use ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini regularly, you've probably retyped the same five prompts a hundred times. "Summarize this." "Translate to…" "Rewrite this in plain English." Quick Prompt is the smallest possible tool to fix that.
Pop open the sidebar, paste a prompt, save. The next time you're in any text field on the web, type / and pick the one you want. Keep typing to filter. The whole thing is built around the kind of muscle memory you already have from Slack and Discord.
Features
Works in <input>, <textarea>, and contenteditable. ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, plain forms, even your inbox.
Keep typing after the slash to fuzzy-search by title or body. ↑/↓ to navigate, ↵ to insert.
Press → on a highlighted prompt to tweak it on the spot. ⌘↵ saves. Never leaves the page you're on.
Click the toolbar icon to open the sidebar. Save, search, edit, copy, delete. The sidebar stays put while you switch tabs.
Highlight any text on any webpage, right-click, and pick Save selection as Quick Prompt. It's already in your library.
Prompts live in chrome.storage.local on your device. No accounts, no servers, no telemetry — and zero host permissions.
How it works
Open the Quick Prompt sidebar from the toolbar and paste in a prompt you find yourself reusing. Or highlight text on any page, right-click, and save the selection. The title is auto-generated from the first line if you don't enter one.
A small dropdown appears anchored to your cursor. Use the arrow keys to navigate, or keep typing to filter the list — the slash trigger only fires at the start of a word, so URLs and code paths typed normally don't conflict.
Hit ↵ to insert. Press → on the highlighted item to tweak the prompt before inserting; ⌘↵ saves your changes. Insertion uses Chrome's native input events, so it works correctly inside React-based editors like ChatGPT and Claude.
Privacy
Renders the sidebar manager UI. Required for any extension that opens a side panel.
Saves your prompts in chrome.storage.local on your machine. Never leaves your browser.
Adds the right-click "Save selection as Quick Prompt" item. Nothing else.
No host permissions. No tabs, no scripting, no analytics, no remote calls. The slash dropdown is a content script that only listens for keystrokes — it never reads page content or makes network requests.
Who uses it
Refactor, code-review, doc-generation prompts. The same six prompts cover 80% of your conversations with Claude or ChatGPT — stop retyping them.
Tone-change, line-edit, headline generation, summarization. Save your favorite "rewrite this in plain English" prompt once.
Recurring meeting summaries, customer email templates, status-update boilerplate. One slash, one keystroke.
"Summarize this paper", "extract the methodology", "find the assumptions". Build a personal library of analysis prompts.
Quick Prompt is free. Three permissions, no account, no telemetry, no servers — your prompts never leave your browser.
Free · Three permissions · Zero host access · 100% local