Why a quiz from slides
Slides synthesize a course, but they don't tell you whether you've mastered the content. You can reread 50 slides in 10 minutes and feel confident, yet not be able to recall anything without the slides in front of you. A quiz reveals the gap between familiarity and real mastery.
The quiz is the fastest diagnostic tool. In 15 minutes, you identify which chapters you own and which still need work, then focus revisions where they pay off.
Three modes for slides
MCQ with slide-grounded distractors
AI pulls wrong answers from the actual content of other slides. No silly traps: distractors are nearby concepts students truly confuse. You test fine-grained understanding.
True/false on key claims
Your slide bullets become statements to validate. Diane mixes verbatim bullets with subtly false variations (one word changed, a number flipped). Great for catching misreadings.
Cloze
Best for slides rich in numbers, dates, proper nouns or formulas. A sentence is extracted, a key element hidden, you retrieve it.
Visuals and diagrams included
Diane also analyzes slide images and diagrams. It can generate questions on a chart, ask you to identify an element or explain what it represents. For science-heavy slides, this mode is valuable.
Exam mode or practice mode
Your call. Practice mode lets you answer at your pace with instant grading. Exam mode is timed and grades only at the end, mirroring real conditions.
Use cases
Students: self-assess after a lecture, verify mastery before a midterm from chapter slides. Teachers: generate a quiz from your slides for in-class or online use. Pros: post-training assessment quiz, onboarding comprehension check.