Qiskit | Skills Pool
Qiskit Qiskit is the world's most popular open-source quantum computing framework with 13M+ downloads. Build quantum circuits, optimize for hardware, execute on simulators or real quantum computers, and analyze results. Supports IBM Quantum (100+ qubit systems), IonQ, Amazon Braket, and other providers.
sickn33 33,802 스타 2026. 4. 13. When to Use
You are building or optimizing quantum circuits with Qiskit for simulators or real hardware.
You need IBM Quantum-style tooling for transpilation, execution, visualization, or algorithm libraries.
You want guidance on moving from a simple circuit prototype to backend-aware execution.
Overview
Qiskit is the world's most popular open-source quantum computing framework with 13M+ downloads. Build quantum circuits, optimize for hardware, execute on simulators or real quantum computers, and analyze results. Supports IBM Quantum (100+ qubit systems), IonQ, Amazon Braket, and other providers.
Key Features:
83x faster transpilation than competitors
29% fewer two-qubit gates in optimized circuits
Backend-agnostic execution (local simulators or cloud hardware)
Comprehensive algorithm libraries for optimization, chemistry, and ML
Quick Start
Installation
npx skillvault add sickn33/sickn33-antigravity-awesome-skills-plugins-antigravity-awesome-skills-claude-skills-qiskit-skill-md
스타 33,802
업데이트 2026. 4. 13.
직업 uv pip install qiskit
uv pip install "qiskit[visualization]" matplotlib
First Circuit from qiskit import QuantumCircuit
from qiskit.primitives import StatevectorSampler
# Create Bell state (entangled qubits)
qc = QuantumCircuit(2)
qc.h(0) # Hadamard on qubit 0
qc.cx(0, 1) # CNOT from qubit 0 to 1
qc.measure_all() # Measure both qubits
# Run locally
sampler = StatevectorSampler()
result = sampler.run([qc], shots=1024).result()
counts = result[0].data.meas.get_counts()
print(counts) # {'00': ~512, '11': ~512}
Visualization from qiskit.visualization import plot_histogram
qc.draw('mpl') # Circuit diagram
plot_histogram(counts) # Results histogram
Core Capabilities
1. Setup and Installation For detailed installation, authentication, and IBM Quantum account setup:
Installation with uv
Python environment setup
IBM Quantum account and API token configuration
Local vs. cloud execution
2. Building Quantum Circuits For constructing quantum circuits with gates, measurements, and composition:
See references/circuits.md
Creating circuits with QuantumCircuit
Single-qubit gates (H, X, Y, Z, rotations, phase gates)
Multi-qubit gates (CNOT, SWAP, Toffoli)
Measurements and barriers
Circuit composition and properties
Parameterized circuits for variational algorithms
3. Primitives (Sampler and Estimator) For executing quantum circuits and computing results:
See references/primitives.md
Sampler : Get bitstring measurements and probability distributions
Estimator : Compute expectation values of observables
V2 interface (StatevectorSampler, StatevectorEstimator)
IBM Quantum Runtime primitives for hardware
Sessions and Batch modes
Parameter binding
4. Transpilation and Optimization For optimizing circuits and preparing for hardware execution:
See references/transpilation.md
Why transpilation is necessary
Optimization levels (0-3)
Six transpilation stages (init, layout, routing, translation, optimization, scheduling)
Advanced features (virtual permutation elision, gate cancellation)
Common parameters (initial_layout, approximation_degree, seed)
Best practices for efficient circuits
5. Visualization For displaying circuits, results, and quantum states:
See references/visualization.md
Circuit drawings (text, matplotlib, LaTeX)
Result histograms
Quantum state visualization (Bloch sphere, state city, QSphere)
Backend topology and error maps
Customization and styling
Saving publication-quality figures
6. Hardware Backends For running on simulators and real quantum computers:
See references/backends.md
IBM Quantum backends and authentication
Backend properties and status
Running on real hardware with Runtime primitives
Job management and queuing
Session mode (iterative algorithms)
Batch mode (parallel jobs)
Local simulators (StatevectorSampler, Aer)
Third-party providers (IonQ, Amazon Braket)
Error mitigation strategies
7. Qiskit Patterns Workflow For implementing the four-step quantum computing workflow:
See references/patterns.md
Map : Translate problems to quantum circuits
Optimize : Transpile for hardware
Execute : Run with primitives
Post-process : Extract and analyze results
Complete VQE example
Session vs. Batch execution
Common workflow patterns
8. Quantum Algorithms and Applications For implementing specific quantum algorithms:
See references/algorithms.md
Optimization : VQE, QAOA, Grover's algorithm
Chemistry : Molecular ground states, excited states, Hamiltonians
Machine Learning : Quantum kernels, VQC, QNN
Algorithm libraries : Qiskit Nature, Qiskit ML, Qiskit Optimization
Physics simulations and benchmarking
Workflow Decision Guide
Install Qiskit or set up IBM Quantum account → references/setup.md
Build a new quantum circuit → references/circuits.md
Understand gates and circuit operations → references/circuits.md
Run circuits and get measurements → references/primitives.md
Compute expectation values → references/primitives.md
Optimize circuits for hardware → references/transpilation.md
Visualize circuits or results → references/visualization.md
Execute on IBM Quantum hardware → references/backends.md
Connect to third-party providers → references/backends.md
Implement end-to-end quantum workflow → references/patterns.md
Build specific algorithm (VQE, QAOA, etc.) → references/algorithms.md
Solve chemistry or optimization problems → references/algorithms.md
Best Practices
Development Workflow
Start with simulators : Test locally before using hardware
from qiskit.primitives import StatevectorSampler
sampler = StatevectorSampler()
Always transpile : Optimize circuits before execution
from qiskit import transpile
qc_optimized = transpile(qc, backend=backend, optimization_level=3)
Use appropriate primitives :
Sampler for bitstrings (optimization algorithms)
Estimator for expectation values (chemistry, physics)
Choose execution mode :
Session: Iterative algorithms (VQE, QAOA)
Batch: Independent parallel jobs
Single job: One-off experiments
Use optimization_level=3 for production
Minimize two-qubit gates (major error source)
Test with noisy simulators before hardware
Save and reuse transpiled circuits
Monitor convergence in variational algorithms
Hardware Execution
Check backend status before submitting
Use least_busy() for testing
Save job IDs for later retrieval
Apply error mitigation (resilience_level)
Start with fewer shots, increase for final runs
Common Patterns
Pattern 1: Simple Circuit Execution from qiskit import QuantumCircuit, transpile
from qiskit.primitives import StatevectorSampler
qc = QuantumCircuit(2)
qc.h(0)
qc.cx(0, 1)
qc.measure_all()
sampler = StatevectorSampler()
result = sampler.run([qc], shots=1024).result()
counts = result[0].data.meas.get_counts()
Pattern 2: Hardware Execution with Transpilation from qiskit_ibm_runtime import QiskitRuntimeService, SamplerV2 as Sampler
from qiskit import transpile
service = QiskitRuntimeService()
backend = service.backend("ibm_brisbane")
qc_optimized = transpile(qc, backend=backend, optimization_level=3)
sampler = Sampler(backend)
job = sampler.run([qc_optimized], shots=1024)
result = job.result()
Pattern 3: Variational Algorithm (VQE) from qiskit_ibm_runtime import Session, EstimatorV2 as Estimator
from scipy.optimize import minimize
with Session(backend=backend) as session:
estimator = Estimator(session=session)
def cost_function(params):
bound_qc = ansatz.assign_parameters(params)
qc_isa = transpile(bound_qc, backend=backend)
result = estimator.run([(qc_isa, hamiltonian)]).result()
return result[0].data.evs
result = minimize(cost_function, initial_params, method='COBYLA')
Additional Resources
Limitations
Use this skill only when the task clearly matches the scope described above.
Do not treat the output as a substitute for environment-specific validation, testing, or expert review.
Stop and ask for clarification if required inputs, permissions, safety boundaries, or success criteria are missing.
02
Overview