claude.nagdy.me This teaching website lets users directly practice Claude Code commands in the browser’s built-in terminal emulator, 11 interactive modules from beginner to advanced, completely free, no installation required, and no API Key needed.
(Background: What is Claude? Complete breakdown of pricing, features, Claude Code, and Cowork — 2026 Anthropic’s most detailed guide)
(Additional background: Anthropic engineers don’t write code anymore: Claude is training the next generation of Claude, and the CEO says, “Not sure how much time is left.”)
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The Vibe coding wave brought by Claude Code is getting hotter and hotter, but many beginners get stuck at the very first hurdle: just figuring out how to write CLAUDE.md, how to set up hooks, and how to use slash commands already takes up most of a day.
Even though the official documentation is detailed, it’s the typical “read it and still won’t know how.” What you need then isn’t more explanation—it’s to try it hands-on.
A new website called claude.nagdy.me is built specifically to address this pain point. The author, Ahmed Nagdy, has a single core claim: “Learn Claude Code by doing, not reading.” The entire site includes 11 interactive modules, a built-in terminal emulator, opens directly in your browser so you can start practicing immediately—zero installation, zero API Key, completely free.
The concept that lowers the barrier the most is “Try before you install.” You don’t need to set up Claude Code on your local machine to begin learning. The website’s built-in terminal emulator lets you practice slash commands, set up hooks, operate skills directly in your browser—there’s almost no difference from the real environment.
For new users, this removes a huge psychological barrier: no need to worry about breaking environment setup, and no need to fear random API charges. First, get the concepts running, confirm you truly want to go deeper, and then install a local environment.
Another major challenge in learning Claude Code is configuration files. How should you structure CLAUDE.md? What’s the format for hooks? How do you configure MCP servers?
The website’s “Config Builder” tool solves this directly. Fill out interactive forms, and it will generate configuration files you can paste straight into your project: it supports CLAUDE.md, skills, agents, hooks, MCP servers, and plugins—everything is covered. No more staring at a blank file, and no more flipping through a pile of examples just to piece together a barely workable configuration.
Many teaching platforms’ quizzes are just process-based: pick the right answer, click to the next question, and there’s no real deepening of understanding. claude.nagdy.me is designed slightly differently: each module ends with a short quiz. If you answer wrong, it doesn’t just tell you “wrong”—it also provides an explanation, so you understand why it’s wrong and what the correct concept is.
This detail may seem small, but for people who genuinely want to get Claude Code figured out, it can speed up the whole chain of logic.
Right now, the website lists a total of 11 course modules:
– Module 1: Slash Commands (30 minutes, beginner)
– Module 2: Memory & CLAUDE.md (45 minutes, beginner)
– Module 3: Project Setup (45 minutes, beginner)
– Module 4: Commands Deep Dive (30 minutes, beginner)
– Module 5: Skills (1 hour, intermediate)
– Module 6: Hooks (1 hour, intermediate)
– Module 7: MCP Server (1 hour, intermediate)
– Module 8: Subagents (1 hour, intermediate)
– Module 9: Advanced Feature (1 hour, advanced)
– Module 10: Workflows (1 hour, advanced)
– Module 11: Plugins (1 hour, advanced)
If you’re one of the following types of people, you should spend an afternoon running through claude.nagdy.me:
Free and no installation—give it a try.