What it is
The AI Questions Generator from OpExams is a web-based tool that automatically produces test items from a variety of source materials. It accepts inputs such as long-form text, topics, website links, YouTube URLs, uploaded media, and PDF documents, and converts those inputs into exam questions intended for use in tests or saved for later. The service supports multiple question formats — including multiple-choice, multi-select, true/false, matching, ordering, short answer, open-ended, and fill-in-the-blank — and the provider reports high usage volume on the site. The product is offered with tiered access (noting Pro and Business distinctions for some capabilities) and an API is available to integrate the generator into other systems.
Key features
The generator provides distinct input modes for long text, topic prompts, web links, YouTube videos, media uploads, and PDFs; certain input types and outputs are labeled as Pro or Business features. It can create a wide range of question types (multiple choice, multi-select, true/false, short answer, fill-in-the-blank, ordering, matching, and open-ended) and indicates some question types are in beta. Language support covers over 90 languages. Management features include collections for organizing questions, a history of past generations, and export options to Word and Excel or direct printing. Additional operational details visible on the site include a per-language text limit (roughly 2,000 words for English) and a “Quiz me” mode for interactive practice.
Use cases
The content on the site frames the tool for educators and assessment designers who need to turn instructional material and multimedia into test items for classroom or online exams. It is also presented for use in creating quizzes, printable tests, and structured assessments for students. Organizations and enterprises are referenced as potential users through Business tier options and an available API for integration into institutional workflows. The export and print functions support offline administration and document-based test creation, while collections and history assist with question reuse and management across courses or training programs.