⭐ Featured by Cursor
A curated collection of Cursor slash-command prompts that give your team reusable, version-controlled AI workflows directly inside the Cursor IDE.
🔗 Also check out Cursor Hooks - that runs after every file edit
Cursor Commands are reusable AI prompts saved as Markdown files in
.cursor/commands/
. When you type /
in Cursor's chat input, the IDE lists
every command from your project and your global library so you can insert the
prompt instantly. They act like AI-driven shortcuts that automate repetitive
tasks, reinforce team standards, and keep feedback consistent.
- 🚀 Quick access: Type
/
to surface every command without leaving your flow - 🔄 Reusable: Standardize prompts for common tasks across the whole team
- 👥 Shareable: Store commands in git so they ship with your repository
- 🎯 Focused: Each command targets a specific workflow with clear structure
- 📝 Customizable: Edit or extend the Markdown files to match your processes
Commands can live in two places:
- Project commands: Store Markdown files in
.cursor/commands
inside your repository - Global commands: Store personal commands in
~/.cursor/commands
on your machine
Cursor automatically scans both directories when you type /
, combines the
results, and inserts the selected command into the chat ready to run.
- Type
/
in Cursor's AI chat or agent input - Select from the available commands
- Let the AI execute the prompt with the relevant project context
- Create a
.cursor/commands
directory in your project root - Add
.md
files with descriptive names (for example,code-review.md
,run-all-tests-and-fix.md
) - Write clear Markdown instructions describing what the command should accomplish
- Open Cursor, type
/
, and choose your new command to execute it immediately
Example structure:
.cursor/
└── commands/
├── accessibility-audit.md
├── add-documentation.md
├── add-error-handling.md
├── address-github-pr-comments.md
├── code-review.md
├── create-pr.md
├── database-migration.md
├── debug-issue.md
├── fix-compile-errors.md
├── fix-git-issues.md
├── generate-api-docs.md
├── generate-pr-description.md
├── light-review-existing-diffs.md
├── lint-fix.md
├── lint-suite.md
├── onboard-new-developer.md
├── optimize-performance.md
├── refactor-code.md
├── run-all-tests-and-fix.md
├── security-audit.md
├── security-review.md
├── setup-new-feature.md
└── write-unit-tests.md
lint-fix.md
– Automatically analyze and fix linting issues in the current filelint-suite.md
– Run project linters, apply fixes, and ensure codebase meets formatting requirementsrefactor-code.md
– Improve code quality while maintaining functionalityoptimize-performance.md
– Analyze and optimize code performanceadd-error-handling.md
– Implement comprehensive error handling across the change set
code-review.md
– Comprehensive review checklist with structured steps and focus areasaddress-github-pr-comments.md
– Process reviewer feedback and craft thoughtful responseslight-review-existing-diffs.md
– Quick pass to highlight risky diffs and cleanup itemscreate-pr.md
– Prepare a well-structured pull request with validation checklistgenerate-pr-description.md
– Draft detailed pull-request descriptions automatically
run-all-tests-and-fix.md
– Execute the full suite, triage failures, and confirm fixeswrite-unit-tests.md
– Generate focused unit tests with proper coveragedebug-issue.md
– Step-by-step debugging workflow for isolating defectsfix-compile-errors.md
– Diagnose and resolve compilation failures quickly
add-documentation.md
– Capture comprehensive product or code documentationgenerate-api-docs.md
– Produce rich API documentation with schemas and examplesonboard-new-developer.md
– Checklist-driven onboarding for new teammatessetup-new-feature.md
– Plan requirements, branching, and architecture for new work
security-audit.md
– Structured security checklist for code changessecurity-review.md
– Broader vulnerability and risk assessment workflowaccessibility-audit.md
– Review for WCAG compliance issuesdatabase-migration.md
– Plan, create, and validate database migrations with rollbacksfix-git-issues.md
– Resolve merge conflicts and repository problems safely
- Clone this repository or copy the
.cursor/commands/
directory into your project - Open the project in Cursor IDE
- Type
/
in the AI chat to browse available commands - Select a command and let Cursor execute the prompt with your code context
# Option 1: clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/hamzafer/cursor-commands.git
cd cursor-commands
# Option 2: copy commands into an existing project
cp -r cursor-commands/.cursor /path/to/your/project/
Alternatively, create the directory manually:
- Create
.cursor/commands/
in your project root - Copy or author the Markdown command files you need
Use the existing files as templates or start from scratch:
touch .cursor/commands/my-custom-command.md
# My Custom Command
Brief description of what this command does.
## Objective
Detailed explanation of the task and expected outcome.
## Requirements
- Specific requirements or constraints
- Coding standards to follow
- Expected formats or structures
## Output
Description of what the AI should produce.
Provide clear instructions for the AI to follow.
# Generate API Documentation
Create comprehensive API documentation for the current code. Include:
- Endpoint descriptions and HTTP methods
- Request/response schemas with examples
- Authentication requirements
- Error codes and responses
- Rate limiting information
Format as OpenAPI/Swagger specification.
# Security Audit
Perform a security audit of the current code. Check for:
- SQL injection vulnerabilities
- XSS attack vectors
- Authentication and authorization issues
- Input validation problems
- Sensitive data exposure
Provide specific remediation steps for each issue found.
- Be specific: Describe the expected outcome and acceptance criteria
- Provide context: Reference project conventions, architecture, or standards
- Set boundaries: Clarify scope, assumptions, and tooling limits
- Include examples: Show expected formats or responses when helpful
- Stay focused: Keep each command targeted to a single, clear objective
- Review together: Treat command changes like code changes and review in PRs
- Use descriptive names: Make filenames reflect the command's purpose
- Open an issue for feedback or requests
- Refer to this README for the command index that ships with the prompts
This project is open source and available under the MIT License.