Times Tables is a free application designed to be used by children learning their times tables from 2x up to 10x.
There are three different ways of using it.
In "practice", you choose one or more of the times tables to practice and how long you want to practice for
Math Quest - Test your mental math and exercise your brain once a day. Fun for all ages!
The most popular brain training app on WP7. Math Quest helps enhance mental arithmetic for all ages. Practice daily, get results!
This new and exciting app will put the fun back into learning and testing your basic math skills.
Math Quest is fun, simple and easy to use
2 Players Math - Practice multiplication with your kids! This free app will make your kids crazy about multiplication table! Your kids will excell at school!
2 Players Math pits two opponents on one phone against each other in a race to see whose math brain is the fastest.
Choose to compete in addition or multiplication of 1- 2- or 3-digit numbers
Easy and quick help with trigonometry. You can check the most frequently used for simple functions and see in the picture, what to this feature represents
Flash Cards (Multiply and Divide) - A challenging series of questions are given to you based on selected operations and skill level.
Multiplication and/or Division operations may be selected.
After 10 questions, a summary of accuracy is calculates as a percentage score
Flash Cards (Add and Subtract) - A challenging series of questions are given to you based on selected operations and skill level.
After 10 questions, a summary of accuracy is given by percentage score.
Details of questions asked, answers given and correct answers are also shown at the summary page
Number Ladder Free - This application is for "Parents" with children aged 4-6.
Is your child at a point in their life, where numbers are almost something tangible?
As a parent, are you ready to sit down with your child, and teach them the number system?
I know it's so cute when a child yells out, three hundred forty fifty six
Calculate Pi - In the seventeenth century, mathematicians Gottfried Leibniz and John Gregory came up with an equation for calculating Pi. This was the first significant change in approach to calculating the value of Pi since Archimedes started using polygons.
The equation is Pi/4 = 1 - (1/3) + (1/5) - (1/7) + (1/9)..