# Get started with Gemini CLI Welcome to Gemini CLI! This guide will help you install, configure, and start using the Gemini CLI to enhance your workflow right from your terminal. ## Quickstart: Install, authenticate, configure, and use Gemini CLI Gemini CLI brings the power of advanced language models directly to your command line interface. As an AI-powered assistant, Gemini CLI can help you with a variety of tasks, from understanding and generating code to reviewing and editing documents. ## Install The standard method to install and run Gemini CLI uses `npm`: ```bash npm install -g @google/gemini-cli ``` Once Gemini CLI is installed, run Gemini CLI from your command line: ```bash gemini ``` For more installation options, see [Gemini CLI Installation](./installation.md). ## Authenticate To begin using Gemini CLI, you must authenticate with a Google service. In most cases, you can log in with your existing Google account: 1. Run Gemini CLI after installation: ```bash gemini ``` 2. When asked "How would you like to authenticate for this project?" select **1. Sign in with Google**. 3. Select your Google account. 4. Click on **Sign in**. Certain account types may require you to configure a Google Cloud project. For more information, including other authentication methods, see [Gemini CLI Authentication Setup](./authentication.md). ## Configure Gemini CLI offers several ways to configure its behavior, including environment variables, command-line arguments, and settings files. To explore your configuration options, see [Gemini CLI Configuration](../reference/configuration.md). ## Use Once installed and authenticated, you can start using Gemini CLI by issuing commands and prompts in your terminal. Ask it to generate code, explain files, and more. > [!NOTE] > These examples demonstrate potential capabilities. Your actual > results can vary based on the model used and your project environment. ### Rename your photographs based on content You can use Gemini CLI to automate file management tasks that require visual analysis. In this example, Gemini CLI renames images based on their actual subject matter. Scenario: You have a folder containing the following files: ```bash photos/photo1.png photos/photo2.png photos/photo3.png ``` Give Gemini the following prompt: ```cli Rename the photos in my "photos" directory based on their contents. ``` Result: Gemini asks for permission to rename your files. Select **Allow once** and your files are renamed: ```bash photos/yellow_flowers.png photos/antique_dresser.png photos/green_android_robot.png ``` ### Explain a repository by reading its code Gemini CLI is effective for rapid codebase exploration. The following example shows how to ask Gemini CLI to fetch, analyze, and summarize a remote project. Scenario: You want to understand how a popular open-source utility works by inspecting its code, not just its README. Give Gemini CLI the following prompt: ```cli Clone the 'chalk' repository from https://github.com/chalk/chalk, read its key source files, and explain how it works. ``` Result: Gemini performs a sequence of actions to answer your request. 1. First, it asks for permission to run `git clone` to download the repository. 2. Next, it finds the important source files and asks for permission to read them. 3. Finally, after analyzing the code, it provides a summary. Gemini CLI returns an explanation based on the actual source code: ```markdown The `chalk` library is a popular npm package for styling terminal output with colors. After analyzing the source code, here's how it works: - **Core functionality:** The main file sets up a chainable API. Each color or modifier (like `bold` or `italic`) is a getter that appends the corresponding ANSI escape code to an internal stack. - **Chainable API:** When you call `chalk.red.bold('Hello')`, you are accessing getters. The `red` getter adds the red color code, and the `bold` getter adds the bold code. - **Output generation:** When the chain is treated as a string (e.g., in `console.log`), a final `toString()` method is called. This method joins all the stored ANSI codes, wraps them around the input string ('Hello'), and adds a reset code at the end. This produces the final, styled string that the terminal can render. ``` ### Combine two spreadsheets into one spreadsheet Gemini CLI can process and transform data across multiple files. Use this capability to merge reports or reformat data sets without manual copying. Scenario: You have two .csv files: `Revenue - 2023.csv` and `Revenue - 2024.csv`. Each file contains monthly revenue figures. Give Gemini CLI the following prompt: ```cli Combine the two .csv files into a single .csv file, with each year a different column. ``` Result: Gemini CLI reads each file and then asks for permission to write a new file. Provide your permission and Gemini CLI provides the combined data: ```csv Month,2023,2024 January,0,1000 February,0,1200 March,0,2400 April,900,500 May,1000,800 June,1000,900 July,1200,1000 August,1800,400 September,2000,2000 October,2400,3400 November,3400,1800 December,2100,9000 ``` ### Run unit tests Gemini CLI can generate boilerplate code and tests based on your existing implementation. This example demonstrates how to request code coverage for a JavaScript component. Scenario: You've written a simple login page. You wish to write unit tests to ensure that your login page has code coverage. Give Gemini CLI the following prompt: ```cli Write unit tests for Login.js. ``` Result: Gemini CLI asks for permission to write a new file and creates a test for your login page. ## Check usage and quota You can check your current token usage and quota information using the `/stats model` command. This command provides a snapshot of your current session's token usage, as well as your overall quota and usage for the supported models. For more information on the `/stats` command and its subcommands, see the [Command Reference](../reference/commands.md#stats). ## Next steps - Follow the [File management](../cli/tutorials/file-management.md) guide to start working with your codebase. - See [Shell commands](../cli/tutorials/shell-commands.md) to learn about terminal integration.