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Math help — step by step, no skipped lines

Most math grades stall not because of intelligence but because nobody shows the line of working that connects one step to the next. We do. Every answer comes with the named method, every formula stated explicitly, and the common trap flagged where it lives.

A real math question students bring us

Solve 2x² − 3x − 5 = 0 using the quadratic formula and check by factoring.

Try it with your own question →

Why math is harder than it looks

Math compounds. If you don't fully get fractions in Year 6, algebra in Year 9 hurts, and calculus in Year 12 feels impossible. The right move when stuck isn't 'try harder' — it's 'go back two steps and rebuild'. Our AI is built to do exactly that without making you feel bad about needing it.

Why students who 'understand' still lose marks

Marking schemes are picky about working. A correct final answer with no method shown often gets 0 or 1 mark out of 5. Conversely, the right method with an arithmetic slip can still earn 4 out of 5. Our AI explicitly mimics what the marking scheme expects: writes the formula, substitutes, simplifies, states units. That's the difference between an A and a high B for most students.

How we handle photo questions

Snap a photo of a math problem from a textbook, a worksheet, a whiteboard, or even your handwritten notes. The AI's OCR is tuned for math — fractions, integrals, exponents, sigma notation — so you don't have to type LaTeX. If something is misread, you can quickly correct in-line and re-run.

Practice that adjusts to your level

After explaining a topic, the AI generates 5 fresh practice questions at the same difficulty — and another 5 a step harder. Get one wrong, the next question is targeted at the specific concept you missed (e.g. distinguishing factorisable from non-factorisable quadratics).

Board-aware terminology

If you've set your board to FBISE Federal, CBSE, IGCSE, A Level, AP, or IB during onboarding, the AI uses the terminology and notation that board uses. CBSE writes (a, b) for ordered pairs; FBISE writes {a, b} for sets. Cambridge writes f⁻¹(x) for inverse functions; AQA writes f⁻¹(x) too but the question phrasing differs. Small things — but they're the things you get marked on.

What we do specifically well for math

  • Step-by-step working with every formula named
  • Photo solver for textbook problems (OCR tuned for math symbols)
  • Practice variants at adjusted difficulty
  • Mark-scheme-style feedback on your written answers
  • Concept maps showing how topics connect (algebra → calculus)
  • Built-in calculators (basic, scientific, graphing)
  • Formula sheet per board, organised by topic

Topics covered

AlgebraGeometryTrigonometryCalculusStatisticsProbabilityNumber theoryCoordinate geometryVectorsWord problems

Tools that pair well with math

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