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A comprehensive list of community-developed ChatGPT prompt shorthand styles. These smart instructions help guide the AI to respond in specific formats, tones, or structures—saving time and boosting creativity.

🧠 Prompt Shorthand Styles

Jump to beginner tips →


📎 Table of Contents


🧰 What Are Prompt Shorthand Styles?

🔰 Quick Start: 10 Prompt Shorthand Styles You Can Use Right Now

Want faster, clearer responses from ChatGPT?
Try starting your prompts with these shorthand styles — no complex setup needed.

Shorthand What It Does Example
ELI5: Explains simply, like to a 5-year-old ELI5: What is quantum computing?
Summarize: Gives you the short version Summarize: The history of the Roman Empire
List: Outputs a list of ideas or items List: 10 creative blog titles for AI startups
Rewrite as... Changes tone/style Rewrite as a tweet: This is a guide to AI tools
Bullet Points: Breaks ideas into bullets Bullet Points: Benefits of remote work
Pros and Cons: Compares both sides Pros and Cons: Using AI for content writing
Give examples: Provides sample responses Give examples: Good customer support phrases
Act as [role]: Takes on a persona Act as a UX researcher: Analyze this app
Humanize: Makes formal text sound natural Humanize: This email sounds too robotic
Quick Fix: Suggests fast improvements Quick Fix: My headline isn’t working

Many people refer to them as “hidden codes” or creative shortcuts.
In practice, they’re just smart, reusable instructions that help shape how ChatGPT responds.

These shorthand styles can guide tone, structure, or format — and you’re free to combine or invent your own to suit your needs.


Categories

🎭 Role & Simulation Prompt Shorthands

Table: 🎭 Role & Simulation Prompt Shorthands

Shorthand What It Does
Act as [role]: Responds as a specific persona or expert
Role-play as [character/role]: Responds in the style of a chosen persona
Translate to [language]: Translates text into another language
Correct grammar: Edits text for grammar and clarity

💬 Style & Tone Prompt Shorthands

Table: 💬 Style & Tone Prompt Shorthands

Shorthand What It Does
Humanize: Makes text more conversational and natural
Jargonize: Makes text more technical or professional
Make it persuasive: Adjusts tone to be more convincing or motivational
Rewrite as... Changes tone/style (e.g., poem, tweet)
Haiku-ify: Summarizes a topic in the form of a haiku
Emoji-Explain: Explains a concept using emojis and brief captions
Visualize: Describes how to visualize a concept mentally
Pitch It: Sells an idea or product in a persuasive way
Rewrite for audience: Adapts content for a specific audience (e.g., “for children”)
Condense: Makes text shorter without losing key meaning

📝 Structure & Format Prompt Shorthands

Table: 📝 Structure & Format Prompt Shorthands

Shorthand What It Does
Outline: Creates a structured outline for essays, articles, or projects
Bullet Points: Lists information in bullet points
Checklist: Creates a checklist from content
Table: Presents information in a table format
Summarize: Condenses information into a shorter form
Summarize in X words: Requests a summary with word count limit
TL;DR: Provides a concise summary
Step-by-step: Provides instructions in sequential steps
Expand: Elaborates on a brief idea or summary (also appears in Reasoning)
Compare: Compares two or more items side-by-side
Summarize in bullets: Requests a summary in bullet format
List: Produces an ordered or unordered list
Pros and Cons Table: Outputs a comparison in table format
Format as: Specifies a format like JSON, checklist, etc.
Output only: Suppresses commentary; outputs only the result

🧠 Creative Generation Prompt Shorthands

Table: 🧠 Creative Generation Prompt Shorthands

Shorthand What It Does
Brainstorm ideas: Offers creative suggestions
Storyify: Turns facts into a short story
Write a script: Produces dialogue for video, podcast, or skit
Recipe Mode: Breaks down a process like a recipe
Quick Fix: Gives a rapid, actionable solution
Dialogue: Simulates a conversation between two or more personas

🧠 Reasoning & Thinking Prompt Shorthands

Table: 🧠 Reasoning & Thinking Prompt Shorthands

Shorthand What It Does
CoT: / Chain of Thought: Encourages step-by-step reasoning
Think step by step: Prompts deliberate problem-solving
Feynman Technique: Breaks down for deep understanding
Reflect: Evaluates or critiques the assistant’s own answer
Socratic Mode: Responds with questions instead of answers
Debate Mode: Presents two opposing viewpoints on a topic
Counterargument: Presents an opposing viewpoint
Mythbust: Identifies and corrects common misconceptions
Explain with analogy: Uses analogies to clarify concepts
Analogize: Explains using a familiar comparison
Explain pros and cons in a table: Combines comparison and format
Pros and Cons: Lists advantages and disadvantages
Critique: Offers critical analysis or feedback
Critique and improve: Gives feedback and a suggested revision
Expand: Elaborates or adds detail to a brief idea
Step-by-step: Sequential instructions (standardized casing used here)
ZS: Zero-shot prompting (no examples given)
FS: Few-shot prompting (with examples given)

🧠 Meta-Prompting & Automated Prompting

Table: 🧠 Meta-Prompting & Automated Prompting Shorthands

These shorthands are used when you want the AI to help generate or improve prompts for specific tasks. Ideal for prompt engineers, tool builders, or teaching assistants.

Shorthand What It Does
Generate prompt for: AI creates an effective prompt for a given task
Refine this prompt: Iteratively improves a rough or unclear prompt
Suggest format: Recommends a structure for an input prompt
Diagnose prompt: Analyzes why a prompt might not be working well

🧪 Instructional & Educational Prompt Shorthands

Table: 🧪 Instructional & Educational Prompt Shorthands

Shorthand What It Does
ELI5: Explains simply, like to a 5-year-old
Quiz me: Asks questions to test understanding
Give examples: Provides concrete examples
List FAQs: Generates frequently asked questions on a topic
Give me talking points: Lists key ideas for presentations or discussions
Zero-shot: Responds without any example prompts
Few-shot: Learns from given examples before responding
Explain like a [role]: Adapts explanation for a given role (e.g., lawyer, coach)

🖼️ Multimodal Prompting Shorthands

Table: 🖼️ Multimodal Prompting Shorthands

These shorthand styles are increasingly relevant as LLMs now support images, audio, and video alongside text. Use them when working with multimodal input/output.

Shorthand What It Does
Describe image: Provides a visual description of an uploaded image
Analyze audio: Transcribes or analyzes spoken audio input
Summarize video: Condenses the content of a video
MM: Indicates a multimodal (text + image + audio) prompt or output mode

🏛️ Sector-Specific Prompt Shorthands

Table: 🏛️ Sector-Specific Prompt Shorthands

These styles are tailored for professional or technical fields. They help translate domain-specific knowledge into clear, accessible language — useful for client-facing, training, or decision-making tasks.

Shorthand What It Does
Legal summary: Summarizes legal content in plain English
Medical explain: Clarifies medical concepts for non-experts
Financial brief: Condenses financial data or analysis for fast understanding
UX summary: Explains usability findings for non-designers
Policy explain: Breaks down a policy or guideline for stakeholders

🔁 Iterative & Adaptive Prompting Shorthands

Table: 🔁 Iterative & Adaptive Prompting Shorthands

These shorthand styles help refine output through multiple rounds or adjust it based on new context. They’re ideal for content improvement, product iteration, and human–AI collaboration.

Shorthand What It Does
Iterate: Requests the AI to improve or evolve its previous answer
Adapt: Asks the AI to adjust the output based on feedback or new context
Version: Generates multiple versions or stylistic variations
Refine: Makes the result tighter, cleaner, or more specific

🧪 Prompt Testing & Evaluation Shorthands

Table: 🧪 Prompt Testing & Evaluation Shorthands

These shorthand styles are used to test, validate, or critique prompt behavior.
They’re especially useful for QA workflows, prompt iteration, teaching, or AI evaluation tasks.

Shorthand What It Does
Test prompt: Runs a prompt across different edge cases or scenarios
Evaluate output: Scores, critiques, or benchmarks the AI’s response
Compare outputs: Compares two or more generated results for quality
Score this: Assigns a rating based on clarity, usefulness, tone, etc.

🧪 Accessibility-Focused Prompt Shorthands

Table: 🧪 Accessibility-Focused Prompt Shorthands

These shorthand styles help make outputs more accessible to all users, including those using assistive technologies.
They’re especially helpful in content design, publishing, education, and product documentation.

Shorthand What It Does
Alt text: Generates descriptive text for images to improve accessibility
Screen reader friendly: Reformats content for clarity and compatibility with screen readers
Accessible version: Rewrites or simplifies output to ensure broader comprehension

🧪 Multilingual Prompt Shorthands

Table: 🧪 Multilingual Prompt Shorthands

These shorthands support multilingual outputs or dual-purpose prompts for translation, localization, and language-specific reasoning.
Useful for international workflows, translation pipelines, or educational contexts.

Shorthand What It Does
Translate and summarize: Translates text and provides a condensed version in the target language
Multilingual QA: Generates or answers questions in multiple languages
Explain in [language]: Provides an explanation in a specified language

🧪 Experimental Prompt Shorthands (User-Invented / Define-as-You-Go)

Table: 🧪 Experimental Prompt Shorthands

These styles are not widely recognized yet but may be useful with clear instructions. They’re ideal for internal workflows, prompt tools, or evolving experimentation.

Shorthand What It Does
AcQ: Ask clarifying questions before answering
Breakdown: Split complex prompt into parts
Follow-up: Continue or refine the prior output
Prime: Set format, tone, or constraints in advance
Continue: Resume from last output if cut off
Controlled: Constrain output format (e.g., 300 words, 3 bullets)
Indirect Example: Respond by showing an example instead of direct reply

🧪 Ultra-Compressed Prompt Shorthands (Automation / API / Power Use)

Table: 🧪 Ultra-Compressed Prompt Shorthands

These styles are extremely short (1–2 characters) and are typically used in high-speed prompting scenarios like scripting, automation, or API integrations.
They’re not common in everyday chat-style prompting, but they're growing in use among power users and prompt engineers.

Shorthand What It Does
Q: Stands for "Question" — used in structured scripting
A: Short for "Answer" — paired with Q: for input/output patterns
D: Abbreviation for "Description" — requests a brief summary or label

🧪 Agent-Based Collaboration Shorthands (Preview)

Table: 🧪 Agent-Based Collaboration Shorthands (Future-Oriented)

These shorthand styles support simulated multi-agent workflows — where the AI can delegate, assign, or split roles across tasks.
They’re emerging in agent-based interfaces and assistant orchestration tools.

Shorthand What It Does
Delegate: Instructs the AI to assign subtasks or split a task into parts
Role assign: Distributes responsibilities across fictional team members or AI roles

🌱 Community Shorthand Additions

Table: 🌱 Community Shorthand Additions | Critique + Reframe: | Evaluate an idea and then propose a new angle | | Pros and Cons + Hook It: | Present both sides while making it attention-grabbing |

These styles were proposed based on hands-on experimentation and community input. They're not standard (yet), but they offer new ways to shape AI responses:

Shorthand What It Does Example
Reframe: Changes the perspective or angle of a prompt Reframe: How would a skeptic view this product?
Hook It: Creates an engaging intro or headline Hook It: AI is changing creativity — how do we keep up?
Anticipate: Predicts possible objections, confusions, or next questions Anticipate: What might confuse users in this onboarding flow?

💡 How to Use These

  • Place the shortcode at the start of your prompt.
  • Follow with a clear topic or text sample.
  • Combine multiple codes if needed.

🧩 Some prompt shorthands appear in more than one category — like Expand: or Step-by-step: — because they serve multiple purposes.
This is intentional and reflects their versatility.

🔧 Examples:

ELI5: What is quantum entanglement?
Humanize: Our new tool simplifies content management.
Debate Mode + Emoji-Explain: Is AI dangerous?
Feynman Technique: How does a plane fly?

✨ Tips

  • Create your own ChatGPT is flexible with phrasing like:
    • Break it down like a recipe:
    • Turn this into a bedtime story:
  • Chain them together for even more control or creative effect:

🔗 Chaining Example

ELI5 + Storyify: How does the internet work?
TLDR + Critique: [Insert long email]
Emoji-Explain + Feynman: What is a neural network?

⭐ Top 10 Most Effective Prompt Shorthands

These are among the most versatile and widely used shorthand styles in prompt engineering. Ideal for beginners or fast results:

Shorthand What It Does Example
ELI5: Explains in very simple terms ELI5: What is quantum entanglement?
Summarize: Condenses content Summarize: This article on prompt engineering
List: Outputs structured bullet or numbered items List: 5 pros of using AI for note-taking
Act as [role]: Assigns a persona or voice Act as a marketing strategist: Analyze this headline
Make it persuasive: Shifts tone to be more convincing Make it persuasive: Why we need clean energy
Critique: Offers critical analysis Critique: This project proposal
Bullet Points: Converts output into bulleted list Bullet Points: Key takeaways from this meeting
Quick Fix: Suggests short, actionable improvements Quick Fix: My LinkedIn bio feels flat
Compare: Compares two or more ideas Compare: GPT-4 vs Claude for summarization
Reframe: Offers a new perspective on a topic Reframe: How would an artist describe this tech?

📘 Glossary of Common Terms

Prompt Shorthand Style
A brief, reusable instruction placed at the beginning of a prompt to shape how the AI responds (e.g., Summarize:, ELI5:, Act as [role]:).

LLM (Large Language Model)
A type of AI model trained to understand and generate human-like language. ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini are examples.

Persona / Role
The identity or voice you want the AI to adopt in its response (e.g., a teacher, designer, developer).

Chaining
Combining two or more shorthand styles in one prompt to refine the tone, structure, or depth of the output.

Community-Sourced
Curated from real-world usage patterns, expert guidance, and shared public tips — though not crowd-edited yet.

Prompt Compression:
A technique for shortening prompts using acronyms or dense shorthand (e.g., CoT, ZS, MM). Useful for API calls or fast reuse by advanced users.

Shorthand Variants and Casing
Some styles may appear with alternate forms — like CoT: and Chain of Thought: — depending on whether the shorthand is intended for speed (e.g., scripting) or readability.
Both formats work as long as the intent is clear. Use what fits your style or audience.

Agent-Based Prompting (Emerging)
A future-facing style of prompting where tasks are split among roles or simulated agents (e.g., Delegate:, Role assign:). Not yet common, but gaining traction.


🔍 Shorthand in Action: Before & After Examples

Real-world use of shorthand styles can improve both clarity and output quality. Here's how:

📝 Example 1: Without vs. With Bullet Points:

Prompt (before):
What are the benefits of using version control systems like Git?

Prompt (with shorthand):
Bullet Points: What are the benefits of using version control systems like Git?

Result (summary):
✔️ Faster to scan
✔️ More structured
✔️ Easier to reuse in slides, docs, or code comments

🧠 Example 2: Without vs. With ELI5:

Prompt (before):
Explain how neural networks process data.

Prompt (with shorthand):
ELI5: Explain how neural networks process data.

Result (summary):
✔️ Simpler language
✔️ Easier to understand
✔️ Less jargon

“I used Make it persuasive: with Act as [role]: to generate a funding pitch — it was miles better than my first version.”
— @startup-builder

“Using Quick Fix: and Humanize: helped me rewrite my website copy in minutes. It went from robotic to relatable.”
— @freelance-writer

🎯 Example 3: Without vs. With Make it persuasive: + Act as [role]:

Prompt (before):
Tell me why companies should adopt AI workflows.

Prompt (with shorthand):
Make it persuasive: Act as a strategy consultant: Tell me why companies should adopt AI workflows.

Result (summary):
✔️ More confident tone
✔️ Tailored to a professional voice
✔️ Suitable for client-facing decks or executive briefings


🧪 Prompt Test Case: Reframe

Prompt (before):
Why is remote work challenging?

Prompt (with Reframe:):
Reframe: Why might remote work actually be more productive than office life?

Result:
✔️ Switches perspective
✔️ Encourages open-ended thinking
✔️ Great for creative brainstorming


🤝 Contribute

This resource started as a curated collection — now it’s open for contribution.

  • ✏️ Have a shorthand style that works for you?
  • 💡 Found a better way to explain or combine styles?

➡️ Have an idea? Comment on the Gist or message me directly — this is an open evolving resource.
Let’s keep the language of prompting evolving together.


👥 Credits & Community

Compiled and structured by Luis Martinez / @arenagroove
Inspired by dozens of community resources and public prompt libraries.

This is an open, evolving resource — feel free to fork, remix, or suggest changes.


❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What are prompt shorthand styles?
A: They are concise, reusable instructions that guide ChatGPT’s responses in tone, format, or structure.

Q: How do I use a shorthand style?
A: Place it at the beginning of your prompt followed by your request or content. You can also combine multiple shorthand styles.

Q: Can I create my own shorthand styles?
A: Yes! ChatGPT supports flexible phrasing. As long as your instruction is clear, it can function like a shorthand.

Q: Are all shorthand styles officially supported?
A: Not all. Some are widely recognized (ELI5:, CoT:), while others are experimental or user-defined.


🧠 Try the Prompt Shorthand Tutor (Custom GPT)

Want to explore these styles interactively?

Launch the Prompt Shorthand Tutor on ChatGPT

You can browse by category, test any shorthand on your own writing, or combine multiple styles (like ELI5: + Storyify:) with live examples.

Built by Luis Martinez based on this list — powered by GPT-4o.


📈 What’s New

Prompt shorthand styles are evolving rapidly. This list now includes:

  • Multimodal Prompting Shorthands for text, image, audio, and video (🖼️)
  • Meta-Prompting & Automated Prompting for generating and refining prompts (🧠)
  • Sector-Specific Prompt Shorthands for law, medicine, finance, UX (🏛️)
  • Iterative & Adaptive Prompting Shorthands for revision and variation (🔁)
  • Prompt Testing & Evaluation Shorthands for scoring and debugging (🧪)
  • Accessibility-Focused Prompt Shorthands for inclusive communication (🧪)
  • Multilingual Prompt Shorthands for translation and multi-language output (🧪)
  • Ultra-Compressed Prompt Shorthands for scripting, APIs, and automation (🧪)
  • Agent-Based Collaboration Shorthands (Preview) for role delegation and multi-agent workflows (🧪)

Last updated: July 10, 2025

@wd021
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wd021 commented Jul 8, 2025

bring your prompt expertise to God Tier Prompts!

@arenagroove
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@wd021,
Thanks for the encouragement. I’ve started posting a few prompts to God Tier since your comment, so really appreciate the push.
I did run into some friction though. It’s hard to publish cleanly, and remixing feels disconnected from the original. If you’ve found a good way to share or update prompts there, I’d love to hear.

@wd021
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wd021 commented Jul 9, 2025

@arenagroove give me all your feedback and suggestions. will make it better.

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