Formula checks

Science and practical math tools

These tools make formulas easier to check when units matter. They are useful for homework, workshops, labs and technical planning, but they do not replace safety rules, lab protocols or qualified engineering review.

Ohm's Law Calculator

Find voltage, current, resistance or power from two known values.

Percentage Error Calculator

Compare measured and accepted values.

Standard Deviation Calculator

Summarise spread across a small set of numbers.

Z-Score Calculator

Compare a value with a mean and standard deviation.

Dilution Calculator

Use C1V1 = C2V2 for simple dilution planning.

Practical Science Math Guide

Units, precision, uncertainty and common formula mistakes.

Before trusting a formula answer

Technical calculators depend on units. The formula can be correct and the answer can still be wrong if volts, amps, ohms, watts, millilitres, litres or concentration units are mixed. Write the unit beside each input before using the result.

Use the calculator as a check, not as the whole method. Electrical work still needs component ratings and safety rules. Lab dilution still needs a protocol and safe handling. Statistics still needs a sensible dataset and a question that matches the summary number.

The best pack is simple: calculate, check units, change one input, calculate again. If a small input change produces a large output change, that input deserves verification from the original measurement, label, instrument, data table or protocol.

For school, workshop and lab use, copy the formula, input values, unit conversion and final result into the worksheet. That gives you a clear trail if you need to explain or correct the answer later.

Turn the answer into a decision

The reason this page exists is not just to produce a number. A useful Figure It Quick page should help you decide what to check next. After calculating, keep the original result, change one input and compare the second answer. That tells you whether the decision is sensitive to one assumption or whether the result is fairly stable.

If the answer affects money, health, safety, study, work or a measurement or formula task, write down where the input came from. A bill, quote, label, official rule, measurement, statement or diary entry is stronger than a remembered guess. If the source is weak, the next action is to verify the input before relying on the output.

Use the related worksheet, topic page or article when the result still feels incomplete. The worksheet keeps assumptions together, the topic page helps you choose the next tool, and the article explains where estimates can mislead. That is the difference between a quick calculator and a practical step-by-step guide.

Choosing where to start

Science and practical math tools groups related pages so you do not have to guess the exact tool name. Pick the card closest to your real question, run one calculation, then follow the related links only if the answer raises another practical question.

This keeps the page simple for everyday use. You do not need to open every tool in the category. One good calculation, checked with a second scenario, is usually more useful than scanning a long list.

Helpful links from here