# 🚀 Claude Code Workflow (CCW) - Getting Started Guide Welcome to Claude Code Workflow (CCW)! This guide will help you get up and running in 5 minutes and experience AI-driven automated software development. --- ## ⏱️ 5-Minute Quick Start Let's build a "Hello World" web application from scratch with a simple example. ### Step 1: Install CCW First, make sure you have installed CCW according to the [Installation Guide](INSTALL.md). ### Step 2: Start a Workflow Session Think of a "session" as a dedicated project folder. CCW will store all files related to your current task here. ```bash /workflow:session:start "My First Web App" ``` You will see that the system has created a new session, for example, `WFS-my-first-web-app`. ### Step 3: Create an Execution Plan Now, tell CCW what you want to do. CCW will analyze your request and automatically generate a detailed, executable task plan. ```bash /workflow:plan "Create a simple Express API that returns Hello World at the root path" ``` This command kicks off a fully automated planning process, which includes: 1. **Context Gathering**: Analyzing your project environment. 2. **Agent Analysis**: AI agents think about the best implementation path. 3. **Task Generation**: Creating specific task files (in `.json` format). ### Step 4: Execute the Plan Once the plan is created, you can command the AI agents to start working. ```bash /workflow:execute ``` You will see CCW's agents (like `@code-developer`) begin to execute tasks one by one. It will automatically create files, write code, and install dependencies. ### Step 5: Check the Status Want to know the progress? You can check the status of the current workflow at any time. ```bash /workflow:status ``` This will show the completion status of tasks, the currently executing task, and the next steps. --- ## 🧠 Core Concepts Explained Understanding these concepts will help you use CCW more effectively: - **Workflow Session** > Like an independent sandbox or project space, used to isolate the context, files, and history of different tasks. All related files are stored in the `.workflow/WFS-/` directory. - **Task** > An atomic unit of work, such as "create API route" or "write test case." Each task is a `.json` file that defines the goal, context, and execution steps in detail. - **Agent** > An AI assistant specialized in a specific domain. For example: > - `@code-developer`: Responsible for writing and implementing code. > - `@test-fix-agent`: Responsible for running tests and automatically fixing failures. > - `@ui-design-agent`: Responsible for UI design and prototype creation. - **Workflow** > A series of predefined, collaborative commands used to orchestrate different agents and tools to achieve a complex development goal (e.g., `plan`, `execute`, `test-gen`). --- ## 🛠️ Common Scenarios ### Scenario 1: Developing a New Feature (as shown above) This is the most common use case, following the "start session → plan → execute" pattern. ```bash # 1. Start a session /workflow:session:start "User Login Feature" # 2. Create a plan /workflow:plan "Implement JWT-based user login and registration" # 3. Execute /workflow:execute ``` ### Scenario 2: UI Design CCW has powerful UI design capabilities, capable of generating complex UI prototypes from simple text descriptions. ```bash # 1. Start a UI design workflow /workflow:ui-design:explore-auto --prompt "A modern, clean admin dashboard login page with username, password fields and a login button" # 2. View the generated prototype # After the command finishes, it will provide a path to a compare.html file. Open it in your browser to preview. ``` ### Scenario 3: Fixing a Bug CCW can help you analyze and fix bugs. ```bash # 1. Use the bug-index command to analyze the problem /cli:mode:bug-index "Incorrect success message even with wrong password on login" # 2. The AI will analyze the relevant code and generate a fix plan. You can then execute this plan. /workflow:execute ``` --- ## ❓ Troubleshooting - **Problem: Prompt shows "No active session found"** > **Reason**: You haven't started a workflow session, or the current session is complete. > **Solution**: Use `/workflow:session:start "Your task description"` to start a new session. - **Problem: Command execution fails or gets stuck** > **Reason**: It could be a network issue, AI model limitation, or the task is too complex. > **Solution**: > 1. First, try using `/workflow:status` to check the current state. > 2. Check the log files in the `.workflow/WFS-/.chat/` directory for detailed error messages. > 3. If the task is too complex, try breaking it down into smaller tasks and then use `/workflow:plan` to create a new plan. --- ## 📚 Next Steps for Advanced Learning Once you've mastered the basics, you can explore CCW's more powerful features: 1. **Test-Driven Development (TDD)**: Use `/workflow:tdd-plan` to create a complete TDD workflow. The AI will first write failing tests, then write code to make them pass, and finally refactor. 2. **Multi-Agent Brainstorming**: Use `/workflow:brainstorm:auto-parallel` to have multiple AI agents with different roles (like System Architect, Product Manager, Security Expert) analyze a topic simultaneously and generate a comprehensive report. 3. **Custom Agents and Commands**: You can modify the files in the `.claude/agents/` and `.claude/commands/` directories to customize agent behavior and workflows to fit your team's specific needs. Hope this guide helps you get started smoothly with CCW!