How it works
Every reply has the same three parts.
You ask a question. Aethez plans the answer, walks it step by step, and tells you which past CBSE paper a similar question came from. Here's what happens in between.
- 1
You ask a Class 10 question
Type, paste, or build it with the equation palette. Aethez supports full LaTeX-style notation inline so symbolic and mathematical content renders cleanly. Questions across the Class 10 syllabus work — paste anything you're stuck on, whether it's homework or board-paper revision.
- 2
Aethez looks up similar past questions
The backend searches an index of real CBSE board papers — every Standard and Basic set, every part. Matching uses a mix of text similarity and concept tags so you find questions that test the same idea, not just questions that share the same surface wording.
- 3
A structured answer is composed
The response opens with an Approach paragraph framing the strategy. Then each working step is labelled with What happened, How it was done, and Why it works. A final boxed Answer closes the bubble.
- 4
Sidebars hoist the reference material
Prerequisites, formulas used, and unfamiliar terms are lifted out of the chat bubble into a reference panel — so the conversation reads cleanly and you can scan supporting material without scrolling past the working.
- 5
Provenance row tells you the source
Below every grounded answer, a chip row reads "Similar question type appeared in 2026 Standard · Set 4 · Part 3 · 5 marks". Now you know exactly which paper to revisit if you want the full original question.
What about my data?
Chat history is stored per-account so you can return to past conversations from the sidebar. Authentication is handled by Microsoft Entra External ID (the same identity service Office uses). Aethez never sees your password.