Proof & Prediction Checker
Upload your original paper and see how our predictions compare — with your own eyes. We share exactly how we calculate match scores and what each metric means.
Check it yourself
Upload the actual question paper (PDF or image) and select the exam. We’ll compare it against our predicted paper and send you a report with the same metrics we use below.
Sample report format (CBSE Class 10 Mathematics 2026)
This is how your analysis will look. Submit your paper above to receive your personalised report within 24–48 hours. View full detailed breakdown (all 5 sets, table & pie charts).
| Set | Ques in paper | Ques in predicted | Prediction score % | Predicted questions | Probability % | One question out of |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Set 1 (30/1/3) | 38 | 45 | 69.7 | 26.5 | 58.9 | 1.70 |
| Set 2 (30/2/2) | 38 | 40 | 68.4 | 26.0 | 65.0 | 1.54 |
| Set 3 | 38 | 40 | 75.7 | 28.8 | 71.9 | 1.39 |
| Set 4 (30/4/2) | 38 | 40 | 71.7 | 27.2 | 68.1 | 1.47 |
| Set 5 (30/5/3) | 38 | 40 | 73.7 | 28.0 | 70.0 | 1.43 |
| Average | 38 | 40 | 70.7 | 26.9 | 63.5 | 1.58 |
How we calculate predictions – metrics & weightage
We classify each match between our predicted questions and the actual paper into one of three types. No black box — here’s the exact logic.
| Aspect | Direct Hit | Direct Match | Conceptual Hit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Similarity level | Essentially the same | Same pattern/topic, moderate diff. | Same topic & approach only |
| Core concept | Must match | Must match | Must match |
| Structure / presentation | Slight wording/numerical diff. OK | Moderate difference OK | Significant difference OK |
| Solving method | Must be the same | Similar | Very similar |
| Cognitive level | Must match | Implied similar | Comparable |
| Allowed flexibility | Very low | Medium | High |
- No forced or artificial matches are made, especially across different cognitive levels (e.g. MCQ vs long answer) unless the solving approach is substantially identical.
- Only questions strictly within the relevant syllabus (e.g. Class 10 CBSE) are considered for matching and analysis.
- The reported percentages reflect the degree of academic alignment (conceptual, structural, and methodological similarity). They do not imply or guarantee identical questions in the actual exam.
What each metric means
- Prediction score (%) — How much of the actual paper (by weight) is covered by our predicted questions that match as Direct Hit, Direct Match, or Conceptual Hit.
- Predicted questions — Effective number of questions from our predicted paper that aligned with the actual paper (after applying the match criteria above).
- Probability to appear (%) — For each predicted question, the likelihood it would appear in the exam; aggregated in the report.
- One question out of — On average, how many of our predicted questions you need to prepare to cover one question in the actual exam (lower is better).
Example – CBSE Class 10 Mathematics 2026 (all sets)
| Metric | Min | Max | Average | Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prediction score % | 64.98% | 73.70% | 71.30% | 9.20% |
| Questions covered | 24.51 | 28.01 | 27.09 | 3.5 |
| Probability % | 61.30% | 70.00% | 67.70% | 8.70% |
| Questions needed (one out of) | 1.43 | 1.63 | 1.48 | 0.2 |
How much came from our 4 steps
We claim four things help you crack the exam: 1) Detailed syllabus (track topics), 2) High-probability notes, 3) Mocks, and 4) Predicted papers. Here we show what share of the actual exam came from each step — so you can compare and see where our content matched.
| Step | What we claim | Ques from this step | % of paper |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Syllabus | Topic in our syllabus | 38 / 38 | 100% |
| 2. Notes | Concept in high-probability notes | 32 | 84% |
| 3. Mocks | Similar question in our mocks | 24 | 63% |
| 4. Papers | Match with predicted papers (hit / match / concept) | 26.9 | 70.7% |
Example: CBSE Class 10 Mathematics 2026, 5-set average (38 questions per set). Each detailed report (CBSE Maths, CTET, MP Board) includes this 4-step breakdown for that exam.
Past proof reports
Detailed breakdowns we published for previous exams. Use the new-version links below for table and pie chart views.