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Build Your First Chrome Extension with AI

Stop wishing a website had a specific button or a better way to show data. This course shows you how to use AI to build your own Chrome extensions that do exactly what you need.

Updated Mar 27, 2026

About this course

Most people think building software requires years of learning syntax and logic. It does not. Software is just a set of instructions. Today, you can give those instructions in plain English. If you can describe what you want a website to do differently, you can build a tool that does it. We will not start with coding tutorials or abstract scripts that lead nowhere. Instead, we use a tool called Claude Code. It acts like a professional developer sitting at your desk. You will learn how to find the hidden data a website is already using and tell the AI how to turn that information into a custom dashboard. This is the difference between being a passive user and a tool builder. By the end, you will have a working extension running in your browser. You will know how to look under the hood of any website to find information and how to guide an AI through the build process. You are not just learning a tool. You are learning how to be the director of your own software.

Details

Last updated Mar 27, 2026
3 Units, 10 lessons
3 Assessments

Skills you'll gain with this course

Data Hunting

Use Chrome's hidden tools to find the exact source of information on any webpage.

AI Direction

Write clear instructions that guide AI to create working files instead of just chatting.

Extension Management

Install and run your own custom software directly in Chrome using **Developer mode**.

Collaborative Debugging

Fix errors and improve your tool by giving specific feedback to your AI builder.

Syllabus

3 Units • 10 Lessons • 3 Assessments

Ways To Learn Included

Every lesson enables you to learn in a variety of ways.

3 min read
587 words

These gases, such as carbon dioxide and methane, play a crucial role in regulating Earth's temperature. But what exactly are they, and how do they work? Let's find out.

Read
Carbon Dioxide
Flashcards
Quiz
What is the primary greenhouse gas responsible for trapping heat?
Carbon Dioxide
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Great job! That's the correct answer.
Quiz
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FAQ

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