Study Timetable Generator
Colour-coded weekly grid with โญ double-slots for weak subjects, real session+break times, fairness counts & a branded PDF.
๐ก 50-minute sessions with 10-minute breaks match how attention actually works. Your setup is saved โ come back any time.
๐ 4 sessions/day ยท finishes 7:50 PM
| Time | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4:00 PM โ 4:50 PM | Mathematics | Mathematics | English | Chemistry | Mathematics | Physics |
| 5:00 PM โ 5:50 PM | Physics | Physics | Mathematics | English | Chemistry | Mathematics |
| 6:00 PM โ 6:50 PM | Chemistry | Mathematics | Physics | Mathematics | English | Chemistry |
| 7:00 PM โ 7:50 PM | English | Chemistry | Mathematics | Physics | Mathematics | English |
Weekly sessions per subject
๐ก 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.
๐๏ธA 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.
๐Everything 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.
๐กBuilding 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 2โ3 weeks as topics finish; a stale plan stops being followed.
๐ก 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?+
45โ60 minutes with a 5โ15 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.