Notes to a practice test
made of your own material.
Paste the notes you are revising and get multiple-choice questions to sit yourself, each one tied to the line it came from.
No account, two practice sets a day, notes up to 25,000 characters free.
Open any question to see the line it came from. Paste 40 characters or more to start.
A practice test of your notes, not of the syllabus
Most practice tests are written by someone who is not you, from a syllabus you did not choose, testing the emphasis they decided mattered. That is useful for a standardised exam and close to useless for the specific set of notes on your screen the night before one. This builds the questions from exactly the material you pasted, so the practice test inherits your emphasis, your worked examples, and, honestly, your blind spots.
That last part is the quiet argument for it. A gap in your notes becomes a gap in the practice test, in the same place, and a question you cannot answer points straight back at a line you either never wrote down or never understood. A generic question bank hides that gap behind its own coverage. This does not.
What it is, and what it is not
It is a set of multiple-choice questions, four options each, drawn from your notes, with the source sentence attached to every one. Generate it, close the notes, and work through it the way you would a real paper.
It is not a proctored exam. There is no timer running, no percentage at the end, and no official standing to the result. Those are deliberate omissions, not missing features: a score invented by a web page from your own notes would mean nothing, and pretending otherwise would be the dishonest version of this tool. The value is the questions and where they came from, not a number.
Sitting it so it actually tells you something
Generate the set, then put the notes out of sight before you answer anything; a practice test you take with the material open measures your reading speed, not your recall. Work through it once cold, and treat the questions you fumble as the useful output, more than the ones you breeze through.
For anything that felt wrong, open the question and read its source line before you decide who was mistaken. If the line supports the answer, that is a topic to restudy. If it does not, the tool got that one wrong and you can discard it without doubting your own memory. Then regenerate a fresh set a day later, once the material has had a night to settle, rather than resitting the identical questions you now half remember.
Where a practice test from notes stops
The questions are multiple choice only in this mode, so it does not rehearse an essay or a worked derivation the way a real paper might. It reads up to 25,000 characters on the free tier, about a long chapter, with two sets a day and no saved history across devices. And it is only ever as good as the notes underneath it: a fragment-heavy page gives thinner questions, because the tool is testing the claims you actually wrote, not the ones you meant to.
Straight answers before you sit one
Is this a timed, scored exam?
No, and it is worth being straight about that. It generates practice questions from your notes for you to work through on your own; it does not time you, mark you against a percentage, or hand back an official score. If you want a stopwatch and a grade, run it under your own timer. What it gives you is the questions, drawn from your material.
Multiple choice, or do I write the answer out?
Multiple choice, four options each, in quiz mode. If you would rather recall an answer cold with nothing to pick from, switch the tab above to Flashcards and the same notes come back as prompts instead.
Will it match my actual exam?
It matches your notes, which is a different and often more useful thing. A generic question bank tests the syllabus its author chose; a practice test built from what you wrote down tests what you decided was worth writing down. If your notes have a gap, the practice test has the same gap, and finding that before the exam is the point.
How many questions does it make?
As many as there are separate claims in the notes, not a fixed number. A dense two pages can produce a proper sitting of questions; a thin, bullet-heavy page produces fewer, because a vague line does not make a fair question.
How do I know a question is not wrong?
Every question carries the exact sentence from your notes it was built on, highlighted in the text you pasted. Open the one that feels off and read its source line: if the line does not support the question, that is the tool erring, caught in a second rather than in the exam.
Do I need an account, and what is free?
No account. Two practice sets a day from this browser, up to 25,000 characters of notes each, roughly a long chapter. Longer than that is a Pro waitlist feature. Nothing is emailed and nothing is saved across devices.
Related tools
Or start from the QuizPaste home page, where the same tool takes any text you paste.
QuizPaste generates practice questions from text you provide. It is not a substitute for an official practice exam and is not affiliated with any testing body or exam board.