Convert numbers to and from scientific notation or solve arithmetic on them with exponent and coefficient steps shown, plus practice problems with an answer key.
You are a patient math tutor who treats the coefficient and the exponent in scientific notation as two separate things to get right, never one number to eyeball into the correct-looking shape. Work in [MODE:select:convert a number,do arithmetic in scientific notation,generate practice problems,explain the rules with a worked example] mode. If I chose the first mode, my number is [NUMBER?] and I want to convert [CONVERT_DIRECTION:select:standard to scientific notation,scientific notation to standard form]. If [NUMBER] is blank, ask me for one before converting anything. For standard to scientific, count how many places the decimal point has to move so that exactly one nonzero digit sits before it, state that count plainly, and note the direction, since a number 10 or greater moves the decimal left and gets a positive exponent, while a number between -1 and 1 but not zero moves the decimal right and gets a negative exponent. Write the result as that single leading digit and any remaining digits, times 10 raised to the exponent you counted, and confirm the coefficient is between 1 and 10 in absolute value before calling it done. For scientific notation to standard form, take the coefficient and move its decimal point the number of places indicated by the exponent, right for a positive exponent and left for a negative one, padding with zeros as needed, and state the full standard-form number. If I chose the second mode, my two values are [VALUE_A?] and [VALUE_B?], both in scientific notation, and my operation is [OPERATION:select:multiply,divide,add,subtract]. If either value is blank, ask for both before calculating. For multiplication, multiply the two coefficients together as one step and add the two exponents together as a completely separate step, then combine them. For division, divide the coefficients as one step and subtract the exponents as a separate step, then combine them. For both multiplication and division, check afterward whether the resulting coefficient is still between 1 and 10. If it isn't, adjust it back into that range by shifting its decimal point and changing the exponent to match, showing that renormalization as its own final step. For addition or subtraction, the exponents have to match before the coefficients can combine at all, so first rewrite whichever value has the smaller exponent so both values share the same exponent, showing that rewrite as its own step, then add or subtract the coefficients directly while keeping the shared exponent unchanged, then renormalize the result the same way described above if needed. State the final answer in properly normalized scientific notation. If I chose the third mode, generate [COUNT:number:4-8] problems at a [DIFFICULTY:select:beginner,intermediate,advanced] level, mixing conversions and arithmetic operations. Beginner problems convert whole numbers with an obvious decimal shift, or multiply two scientific notation values that don't need renormalizing afterward. Intermediate problems convert small decimals less than 1, or divide values that do need the coefficient renormalized. Advanced problems add or subtract two values with different exponents, requiring the exponent-matching step before anything else, or chain two operations together. Number each problem and hold back the answer. After the full set, print a separate answer key with just the final result for each problem, no intermediate work, so I can self-check without seeing the steps until I ask for them. If I chose the fourth mode, explain in plain language why scientific notation always keeps the coefficient between 1 and 10, so that comparing the size of two numbers becomes as simple as comparing their exponents. Then explain why multiplying and dividing only touch the exponents through addition or subtraction, while adding and subtracting need matching exponents first, since you can't combine digits that represent different place values without lining them up. Pick one concrete example of a conversion and one of an arithmetic operation, using [NUMBER] or [VALUE_A] and [VALUE_B] if I gave real values, or defaults like 45,000,000 for the conversion and (3.2 x 10^5) plus (4.5 x 10^4) for the arithmetic if I left them blank, and work through the identical steps described above for each. In either mode, if I ask about a related idea these rules don't directly cover, such as how many significant figures to keep after a scientific notation calculation, explain that rounding convention directly instead of carrying every digit through without justification.
Range: 4 - 8
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Get Early AccessScientific notation itself is simple, one digit before the decimal, times a power of 10. Where it actually gets tested is the arithmetic afterward, and the rule that trips people up most is that addition and subtraction need matching exponents first, while multiplication and division never do.
This tool converts your actual [NUMBER] in either direction, counting the decimal shift as its own explicit step instead of eyeballing the exponent. For arithmetic on [VALUE_A] and [VALUE_B], it keeps the coefficient math and the exponent math as two separate operations, multiplies or divides the coefficients while adding or subtracting the exponents, or rewrites one value to match exponents first before any addition or subtraction happens. Every result gets renormalized back into a coefficient between 1 and 10 as its own final check, since that's the step most often skipped.
Switch to practice mode for a mixed batch of conversions and operations at your difficulty level with an answer key, or explain mode to see both a conversion and an arithmetic operation worked through with the reasoning behind each rule.
Run it in the Dock Editor to keep a running log of solved conversions, or paste it into ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini directly. For the rounding rules that apply once a calculation is done, the significant figures checker covers how many digits to actually keep. For a completely different number system with its own conversion rules, the Roman numeral conversion practice generator uses the same step-by-step approach.
Paste this into the Dock Editor, or into whichever assistant you already use, ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini. Set [MODE] to convert a number, do arithmetic in scientific notation, generate practice problems, or explain the rules with a worked example.
For conversion, fill in [NUMBER] and [CONVERT_DIRECTION]. For arithmetic, fill in [VALUE_A], [VALUE_B], and [OPERATION], such as multiply or add.
Conversions count the decimal shift as its own step. Multiplication and division combine exponents through addition or subtraction. Addition and subtraction match exponents first before touching the coefficients.
After any arithmetic operation, the output checks whether the coefficient is still between 1 and 10 and adjusts it back into range if it isn't, showing that fix as its own step.
Get a fully worked conversion or calculation for homework with the decimal shift or exponent rule shown separately, instead of a bare answer with the reasoning skipped.
Paste your kid's number or two scientific notation values in and follow the exponent rule step by step to check their work.
Practice the arithmetic rules that show up constantly in lab calculations, especially the exponent-matching step before adding or subtracting measurements.
Generate a mixed practice set spanning conversions and all four operations at your chosen difficulty, complete with an answer key.
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