grade-school-math for Personal Projects

Use case · default · 1,440 stars

Teams use grade-school-math to accelerate side projects and hobbies. Here's how — with real workflows, prompts, and what to expect in 2026.

Why grade-school-math for for personal projects

grade-school-math is general-purpose use across work and personal projects. For building side projects faster, the typical workflow is:

  1. Define the input. Gather the data, context, or prompt you'll feed in.
  2. Set up the template. Build a reusable prompt in grade-school-math that handles your common case.
  3. Run on a small batch. Test on 5-10 examples. Check quality before scaling.
  4. Iterate on the prompt. Most teams spend 30-90 min refining the prompt before they get consistent results.
  5. Wire into the workflow. Either via grade-school-math's built-in features, or an API/script.

What you can do with grade-school-math for personal projects

Real example prompts

For solo work:

Help me accelerate side projects and hobbies for the next 30 minutes. I have these inputs: [paste]. Output: a clear, ready-to-use draft.

For team use:

I'm on a small team. We need to accelerate side projects and hobbies. Suggest a workflow, the prompts we'd need, and how to measure success.

For client work:

Generate 3 different versions of [output] for client X. Each should be on-brand and ready to send after light editing.

What works, what doesn't

How grade-school-math compares for for personal projects

Other tools in this space: ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Perplexity, Copilot. grade-school-math stands out for default workflows. If your task is heavily brainstorming-focused, it's a strong default. If you need broader coverage, look at the alternatives.

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