Which AI tool is best for solving math problems?
For school-level and basic college math, it is usually best to start with Photomath, Gauth, Mathos, or MathGPT: they are better at recognizing formulas and often show step-by-step solutions. For more complex calculations, graphs, integrals, and checking exact answers, Wolfram can be useful.
Can I solve a problem from a photo?
Yes. Photomath, Gauth, Socratic, and some AI tutors can work with a photo or screenshot. It is best to upload a clear image without glare or cropped parts of the problem. If the task includes a diagram or a long text, check after recognition that the service understood all the details correctly.
Which services are suitable for subjects beyond math?
For different subjects, consider Gauth, Socratic, StudyX, ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, and Camp (formerly Kampus AI). They can explain problem statements, solve word problems, and help with physics, chemistry, biology, and humanities questions. However, exact calculations are best double-checked in specialized solvers.
Can I use these AI tools for free?
Many services offer free access, but detailed steps, advanced explanations, photo uploads, or a large number of solutions may be limited. A free mode is usually enough to check a few problems, while regular study often requires a paid plan or account limits.
Can I fully trust AI-generated answers?
No. AI can make mistakes when recognizing the problem statement, units of measurement, intermediate formulas, or the logic of the solution. It is better to use the service like a tutor: review the solution process, ask follow-up questions, and verify the final answer, especially before a test, exam, or assignment submission.
Which is better: a specialized solver or ChatGPT/Gemini/Claude?
A specialized solver is better for formulas, graphs, and step-by-step math. A general-purpose chat is better for explaining the problem statement, choosing a method, reviewing mistakes, and handling tasks that require reasoning in words. A good workflow is to solve the problem first in Photomath, Mathos, or Wolfram, then ask a chat tool to explain any unclear step.