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Study Timetable Generator

Colour-coded weekly grid with โญ double-slots for weak subjects, real session+break times, fairness counts & a branded PDF.

Mathematics
Physics
Chemistry
English

๐Ÿ’ก 50-minute sessions with 10-minute breaks match how attention actually works. Your setup is saved โ€” come back any time.

๐Ÿ“… 4 sessions/day ยท finishes 7:50 PM

TimeMonTueWedThuFriSat
4:00 PM โ€“ 4:50 PMMathematicsMathematicsEnglishChemistryMathematicsPhysics
5:00 PM โ€“ 5:50 PMPhysicsPhysicsMathematicsEnglishChemistryMathematics
6:00 PM โ€“ 6:50 PMChemistryMathematicsPhysicsMathematicsEnglishChemistry
7:00 PM โ€“ 7:50 PMEnglishChemistryMathematicsPhysicsMathematicsEnglish

Weekly sessions per subject

Mathematics: 9 โญPhysics: 5Chemistry: 5English: 5

๐Ÿ’ก Subjects never repeat back-to-back on the same day, and โญ focus subjects get twice the sessions โ€” the fairness list shows the exact split. Pair with the Exam Days Remaining tool to size your runway.

๐Ÿ—“๏ธA timetable that knows your weak subjects

List your subjects, star the ones that need extra work โ€” โญ focus subjects get double the sessions โ€” pick your days and hours, and get a colour-coded weekly grid instantly. The generator spaces subjects so nothing repeats back-to-back, builds real session times with breaks (50 + 10 by default, the rhythm attention research supports), shows a fairness count per subject, and exports a branded PDF you can print and stick on the wall. Your setup is saved โ€” tweak it any evening.

๐Ÿ“ŠEverything you'd want to know

  • Up to 10 colour-coded subjects; โญ doubles a subject's weekly share.
  • No subject appears twice in a row on any day โ€” variety keeps attention fresh.
  • Session and break lengths are configurable; the grid shows exact clock times and the daily finish.
  • A per-subject session count proves the split is fair (and shows the โญ boost working).
  • One-click branded PDF (with the weekly distribution chart) plus a print option.
  • Everything persists in your browser โ€” regenerate after every exam cycle.

๐Ÿ’กBuilding a timetable that survives week one

  • Star at most 2 subjects โ€” doubling everything doubles nothing.
  • Schedule your hardest subject in the first slot, when willpower is highest.
  • 50-minute sessions with 10-minute movement breaks beat 3-hour marathons on retention per hour.
  • Leave one day light (or off) โ€” recovery is part of the schedule, not a failure of it.
  • Revise the timetable every 2โ€“3 weeks as topics finish; a stale plan stops being followed.
Maths starred with Physics, Chemistry, English across Monโ€“Sat, 4 ร— 50-minute sessions from 4 PM: Maths lands 8 sessions a week, the others 5โ€“6 each, and every evening ends by 7:50 PM โ€” visible on the grid before you commit.

๐Ÿ’ก Frequently Asked Questions

How do I make a study timetable?+

List subjects, choose study days and a daily start time, and set session/break lengths โ€” the generator distributes subjects across the week automatically, with extra sessions for the ones you star as weak. Print it or download the PDF.

How does the focus-subject star work?+

A starred subject enters the rotation twice, so it receives roughly double the weekly sessions โ€” the per-subject count below the grid shows the exact split. Star your one or two weakest subjects only.

How long should study sessions be?+

45โ€“60 minutes with a 5โ€“15 minute break is the sweet spot for most students โ€” long enough for depth, short enough to stay sharp. The default 50+10 follows that rhythm; adjust both in the settings.

Why doesn't the same subject appear twice in a row?+

Interleaving โ€” switching subjects between sessions โ€” improves retention compared to blocking the same subject for hours, and the variety fights fatigue. The generator enforces it automatically.

Can I save or share my timetable?+

Your configuration saves automatically in your browser, so the grid is there when you return. For sharing or printing, download the branded PDF โ€” it includes the full grid and the weekly distribution chart.

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