claude-emotion-prompting is a prompting toolkit for Claude. It gives you ready-made system prompts, CLAUDE.md files, and prompt templates that aim to improve response quality by giving Claude more context about tone, intent, and emotional state.
This repository is built for people who want a simple way to shape Claude’s replies without writing prompts from scratch. You can use it for support drafts, writing help, planning, reflection, and other tasks where tone matters.
Use the link below to visit the download page and get the files.
- A Windows PC
- A web browser
- A file manager such as File Explorer
- Claude access in your browser or app
- Open the download page.
- Find the green Code button.
- Select Download ZIP.
- Save the ZIP file to your computer.
- Right-click the ZIP file and choose Extract All.
- Open the extracted folder.
You will find files that help you start fast:
- System prompts for different tasks
- CLAUDE.md configs for project use
- Prompt templates you can copy and edit
- Example setups for common writing and thinking tasks
- Reference material tied to emotion-aware prompting
The goal is simple: give Claude the right context before you ask for output.
Choose the file that matches your task:
- System prompt files for direct use
- CLAUDE.md files for project-level instructions
- Template files for repeat use
- Example prompts for quick testing
Open the file in Notepad or another text editor. Copy the text you need.
Paste the prompt into Claude before your request, or place it in your Claude setup if the file is meant for that use.
Write a clear request after the prompt. For example:
- Draft a calm reply to a customer
- Rewrite this message with more empathy
- Help me plan a difficult conversation
- Summarize this text in a steady tone
Use the templates when you want Claude to:
- Rewrite text with a softer tone
- Make a message feel more direct
- Reduce harsh language
- Keep a reply clear and steady
Use the prompts when you need:
- Customer replies
- Internal team notes
- Response drafts for hard cases
- Clear language for tense topics
Use the toolkit when you want Claude to:
- Organize ideas
- Compare choices
- Turn vague thoughts into steps
- Reflect on a situation without strong bias
If the files open in a browser instead of a text editor:
- Right-click the file.
- Select Open with.
- Choose Notepad.
- If you want easier editing, use Notepad++, VS Code, or another editor.
If you want to keep a copy of a prompt, save it as a new file name so you can reuse it later.
A simple setup works well:
- Keep the repo in a folder such as Documents
- Create a folder for prompt drafts
- Store your own edits in a separate file
- Keep a notes file for prompt tests and results
This makes it easier to compare versions and find the prompt that works best for your task.
The repository centers on a few file types that are easy to work with:
.mdfiles for readable prompt docs.txtstyle content for quick copy and paste- Project config text for Claude setup
- Template blocks for repeat use
Try this simple test after you open the files:
- Pick one template.
- Copy it into Claude.
- Add a short request.
- Ask Claude to answer in a calm, human tone.
- Compare the result with your usual prompt.
If the reply feels too flat, add more context. If it feels too loose, shorten the prompt and make the goal clearer.
- Rewriting a tense email
- Drafting a clear support reply
- Making feedback sound less sharp
- Turning messy notes into a clean plan
- Helping Claude stay focused on tone and intent
- Preparing prompts for tasks that need emotional balance
Use short, clear instructions. Claude works best when you tell it:
- What the goal is
- Who the text is for
- What tone you want
- What to avoid
- How long the response should be
Example:
- Goal: write a reply to a customer complaint
- Tone: calm and respectful
- Avoid: blame, sarcasm, and filler
- Length: 5 short paragraphs
This repository does not need heavy hardware. A normal Windows PC should be enough.
- Windows 10 or Windows 11
- Internet access for download and Claude use
- A text editor
- Enough free space for a small ZIP file and extracted folder
This repo sits in the space between prompt design and emotional intelligence. It fits topics like:
- ai-prompting
- anthropic
- emotional-intelligence
- llm
- prompt-engineering
- system-prompts
When you change a prompt, keep the structure easy to follow:
- Use short lines
- Put the main goal near the top
- Keep rules in a simple list
- Remove anything you do not need
- Test one change at a time
If a prompt does not work well, adjust one part before changing the whole file.
A simple workflow looks like this:
- Download the repo
- Extract the ZIP file
- Open the prompt file
- Copy the text
- Paste into Claude
- Add your task
- Review the output
- Edit the prompt if needed
Use the link below to visit the page and download the repository files.
- Open the page in your browser.
- Download the ZIP file.
- Extract the files on Windows.
- Open the prompt you want to use.
- Copy it into Claude or your Claude project files.
Start with one template, make one small change, and test the result in Claude