Guide context
What this page is designed to answer
Students want a formula or equation sheet page that also teaches when and how to apply the formula under exam conditions.
StudyVector is an early-stage exam platform. These pages are written to help students revise better, then move into useful practice without pretending official specifications or past papers do not still matter.
This page turns formula revision into exam behaviour: recognising the right rule, using it cleanly, and checking the answer without wasting marks.
Supported boards
Cross-check official specifications and past papers with AQA, Pearson Edexcel and OCR. StudyVector is independent and not exam-board affiliated.
Students often search for an A-Level Maths formula sheet when what they really need is formula control. Knowing that a rule exists is not the same as recognising when it applies, rearranging it safely, and using it without introducing algebra errors. This page is built to make formula revision more useful by linking equations and identities back to the topics and question types where they matter most.
Start light first
Start with low-focus cards, drill by topic, or see summer 2026 predicted angles — then set your course and exam board when you want the full loop.
Start low-focus cards · Exam questions by topic · Predicted topics 2026 · All subjects
Guide context
Students want a formula or equation sheet page that also teaches when and how to apply the formula under exam conditions.
Revision method
Do not only read formulas. Cover them, write them, explain what each symbol means, then answer a question that forces you to choose the rule. That sequence tests recognition and recall together.
It also helps to group formulas by decision pattern: differentiation, integration, trigonometric identities, sequences, vectors, and statistics. The goal is not a giant memorised wall of symbols. The goal is fast, accurate selection under pressure.
Students searching for a formula sheet are often one step away from wanting a proper practice route. Once the formula is recalled, the next question is always whether it can be applied correctly.
That is where StudyVector fits. It can test the formula in context, reveal the algebraic slip, and push the student back into the exact topic family that still needs work.
Topic list
These are the maths strands where recognition, rearrangement, and careful execution matter more than simply 'remembering the formula'.
Example questions
Differentiation
Check that you used the right rule and simplified carefully. Many lost marks happen after the correct rule was chosen.
Trigonometry
Because identities require transformation and equivalence, not just finding values. Students often blur those jobs together.
Statistics
Interpreting what each symbol represents in the context of the data, not only remembering the expression itself.
A formula sheet only becomes useful when it shows the decision-making around rearranging, units, and choosing the correct rule.
Each formula page points students back into the topic strands where those equations or identities keep appearing.
Short example questions help students check whether they can actually use the formula rather than merely recognise it.
The advice focuses on recognition cues, common slips, and how high-performing students rehearse equations before a paper.
Pick your route
Subject cards show board support and coverage upfront, so you can decide faster instead of clicking through blind.
Usually no. It is more effective to group formulas by topic and then practise selecting them in mixed question sets.
Often it is not memory loss but choosing the wrong rule or using the correct rule with weak algebraic control.
No. They support topic revision. A formula only matters when you can connect it to the correct method and question type.
Questions follow AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC, Eduqas, CCEA, Cambridge International (CIE), Pearson Edexcel International, OxfordAQA International, SQA, IB, AP spec wording — not generic AI answers. Start light, then save progress when you want the full loop.