Turn messy notes into a clean slide deck
Paste a transcript, outline, or set of class notes. Pick a density. Get a structured, printable deck in seconds.
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From raw notes to a finished deck
Here is a quick walkthrough showing how a student might use this page to turn a rough transcript into a study deck before an exam.
- Copy the transcript. Open your lecture recording app or notes file. Select everything and copy it.
- Paste into the input box. The builder works best when topics are separated by blank lines or numbered headings.
- Pick a density. Choose Exam Prep if you want definitions and check-your-understanding prompts. Choose Review for a shorter deck with bold terms.
- Click Build Deck. Slides appear in the preview panel. Use the arrow buttons to move through them.
- Edit any slide. Click the title, body, or speaker notes to fix wording or add reminders.
- Save or share. Save to your local library for later. Copy a share link to send to a classmate. Export as a single HTML file you can open anywhere.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Pasting one giant block of text. Add blank lines between topics before pasting. This helps the builder find natural slide breaks.
- Trying to fit a full transcript on slides. Slides work best as summaries. Use speaker notes for the detailed explanations.
- Forgetting to edit auto-generated notes. Speaker notes are a starting point. Add your own examples and memory hooks.
- Not saving before leaving the page. If you close the tab without saving, your deck is gone unless you exported it.
What the density presets actually do
Review
Fewer slides. Each slide covers a broad topic with 2-4 bullet points. Key terms are bold. Good for a quick refresher the night before a test.
Lecture
Balanced detail. Each main point gets its own slide with 3-5 bullets. Speaker notes include context and examples. Good for teaching or group study.
Exam Prep
More slides with focused content. Definitions are called out. Check-your-understanding prompts appear at the end of each section. Good for self-testing.
What to know before you start
Assumptions
- Input is in English.
- Topics are separated by blank lines or headings.
- Key terms are identified by frequency and capitalization.
Limitations
- No image or chart generation.
- Very long single paragraphs stay on one slide.
- Speaker notes are auto-generated and may need editing.
Before you share
- Check that no personal or sensitive data is in the transcript.
- Review auto-generated speaker notes for accuracy.
- Test the share link in an incognito window.