The process

How it works

Upload your notes. Get a dense, one-page reference sheet in minutes. Here's exactly what happens under the hood.

01

Upload your source material

Drop in one or more PDFs — lecture slides, textbook chapters, handwritten notes scanned to PDF, study guides, whatever you have. The more material you provide, the better the output.

PDF only. Up to 20 files per request.
02

AI extracts what matters

A large language model reads your documents and identifies the most exam-relevant content: key formulas, definitions, theorems, algorithms, and common pitfalls. Filler, repetition, and worked examples can be filtered out.

Powered by Google Gemini.
03

Content is structured and compressed

The extracted content is organized into labeled sections and trimmed to fit your chosen layout. Density settings control how aggressively the AI abbreviates and packs information.

Typically 15–22 sections on a single page.
04

LaTeX compiles your cheat sheet

The structured content is rendered into a professional LaTeX template — single, two-column, or three-column — and compiled to PDF. The system validates the layout and automatically fixes overflow or margin issues.

Outputs a clean, print-ready PDF.

A note on timing

Generation takes 1–5 minutes per file. The AI sometimes needs a second attempt to produce a clean layout — if the result has issues, just discard and retry. Keep the tab open while it runs.

Layout templates

Compact

Single column

More readable. Best when your material has long explanations rather than dense formulas.

Best for: Narrative subjects, law, history

Two-column

Two columns

The balanced default. Fits more content than compact while remaining easy to scan.

Best for: Mixed content, most subjects

Three-column

Three columns

Maximum density. Ideal for math, chemistry, and physics where formulas are short and plentiful.

Best for: STEM, formula-heavy subjects

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