Step-by-step solution PDF exporter

Turn a problem statement and step-by-step solution into a clean handout. Edit with the preview, then print or save as PDF.

Supports A4/Letter, margins, numbering styles, image attachments, JSON save/load, and share links (doc=) for reusable templates.

Other languages ja | en | zh-CN | zh-TW | zh-HK | es | es-419 | es-MX | pt-BR | pt-PT | id | vi | ko | fr | de | ru-RU | hi-IN | ar | tr-TR | ms-MY | nl-NL

What you can do (quick start)

Step input: 1 line = 1 step. Prefix a line with - for sub-bullets, or >>> for hints.

Solution Exporter

Document setup

Preview

How it's generated

    Workflow tips for reproducible solution packs

    1. The preview updates as you type (or use Apply to refresh).

    2. Sharing: use the doc= link, or download JSON if the URL gets too long.

    3. In your print dialog, disable headers/footers and match margins to the value selected here (10/15/20 mm).

    How to use this tool effectively

    This guide helps you use Step-by-step solution PDF exporter in a repeatable way: define a baseline, change one variable at a time, and interpret outputs with explicit assumptions before you share or act on results.

    How it works

    The page applies deterministic logic to your inputs and shows rounded output for readability. Treat it as a comparison workflow: run one baseline case, adjust a single parameter, and measure both absolute and percentage deltas. If a result seems off, verify units, time basis, and sign conventions before drawing conclusions. This approach keeps your analysis reproducible across teammates and sessions.

    When to use

    Use this page when you need a fast estimate, a classroom check, or a practical what-if comparison. It works best for planning and prioritization steps where you need direction and magnitude quickly before investing in deeper modeling, manual spreadsheets, or formal external review.

    Common mistakes to avoid

    Interpretation and worked example

    Run a baseline scenario and keep that result visible. Next, modify one assumption to reflect your realistic alternative and compare direction plus size of change. If the direction matches your domain expectation and the size is plausible, your setup is usually coherent. If not, check hidden defaults, boundary conditions, and interpretation notes before deciding which scenario to adopt.

    See also

    Frequently asked questions

    How do I create a doc= share link for colleagues?

    Click Share link (doc=) to copy a URL that restores the same JSON when opened. If the URL is too long, download the JSON file and share that instead.

    Can I remove an image after adding it?

    Yes. Added images appear under Attachments — click the “×” to remove one.

    How can I print without breaking steps across pages?

    Choose your paper size, orientation, and margin before printing. Each step block is marked page-break-inside: avoid, so the browser print dialog keeps steps intact when you use Print / Save PDF.

    What should I do first on this page?

    Start with the minimum required inputs or the first action shown near the primary button. Keep optional settings at defaults for a baseline run, then change one setting at a time so you can explain what caused each output change.

    Why does this page differ from another tool?

    Different pages often use different defaults, units, rounding rules, or assumptions. Align those settings before comparing outputs. If differences remain, compare each intermediate step rather than only the final number.

    How to use Step-by-step solution PDF exporter effectively

    How this tool helps

    Tools are designed for quick scenario comparisons. They work best when you keep one question per run, define success criteria first, and avoid switching objectives mid-stream. This reduces decision noise and produces results you can defend in follow-up review.

    Input validation checklist

    Before running, verify that required values are in the right format, that optional flags are intentionally set, and that baseline assumptions reflect current conditions. Invalid assumptions are often mistaken for tool bugs, so validation is part of interpretation quality.

    Scenario planning pattern

    Build three rows: conservative, expected, and aggressive cases. Keep data sources transparent for each case and compare output spacing. The pattern helps you spot non-linear jumps and decide whether a model is stable under plausible variation.

    When to revisit inputs

    Revisit inputs when input scale changes, time window shifts, or downstream decisions add new constraints. If constraints change, your previous output remains a useful reference but should not be treated as final guidance.