Most quiz software falls into two camps: builders where you type every question into a form, and generators that write the first draft for you. If you have material to test on, a generator saves the hours that go into authoring. A few things worth checking before you commit to a tool.
Does it work from your content? Software that builds questions from a one-line topic prompt produces generic items. Software that reads your uploaded document writes questions tied to the exact material your learners studied. PDFQuiz works from the file you upload, so the quiz matches your content.
How many question types does it support? A tool stuck on multiple choice limits how well you can measure understanding. Look for true or false, fill in the blank, short answer and matching too. PDFQuiz generates six types from a single source.
Can you edit and own the output? You want to fix wording and keep the file without a watermark or a forced subscription to download. PDFQuiz lets you edit every question and export a clean PDF or editable Word file that is yours.
What does the input cover? If your material lives in PDFs, slides, scans and Word docs, make sure the tool reads all of them. PDFQuiz accepts PDF, Word, PowerPoint, text and images, and reads scanned pages with OCR.
Is there a real free way to try it? Look for software you can test without a credit card so you can judge the question quality on your own material first. PDFQuiz is free to start, so you can generate a quiz before you decide.