Foundations
Introduction to Desmos
A quick tour of the Desmos graphing calculator you get on the Digital SAT: graph an equation, zoom, scroll the plane, click a point to read its coordinates, and use a slider. Try each one on a live calculator.
Desmos is a built-in calculator on the Digital SAT
Every student gets the Desmos graphing calculator right inside the Digital SAT app, on the whole math section. It is the single biggest time saver on test day: instead of doing algebra by hand, you can graph the problem and read the answer straight off the screen.
This first lesson is a quick tour of the calculator itself. Once the five moves below feel natural, the rest of the course shows you exactly which one to reach for on each type of SAT math question.
Type an equation and it graphs itself
Type any equation into the list on the left and Desmos draws it on the right the instant you finish. You never have to plot points or rearrange for y by hand.
On the SAT: Turn a messy equation into a picture in a couple of seconds, then read the answer off the graph.
Zoom in and out
Scroll on the graph (or use the plus and minus buttons) to zoom. Zoom out when a graph shoots off the screen, zoom in when you need to read a point precisely.
On the SAT: Zoom out to find intercepts or a vertex that starts far away from the middle of the screen.
Scroll around the graph plane
Click and drag anywhere on the grid to slide the view. Big graphs run right off the screen, so you scroll to follow the curve to the part you actually care about.
On the SAT: Chase a vertex or an intercept that sits way below or off to the side of the default view.
Click a point to read its exact coordinates
Hover or click a special point, like where two graphs cross, and Desmos labels it with its exact coordinates. That crossing point is the solution to the system.
On the SAT: Graph both sides of an equation, click where they meet, and read the solution instead of solving by hand.
Add a slider for any unknown
Use a letter like a or k in your equation and Desmos offers to make it a slider. Drag the slider and the whole graph moves in real time so you can see what each value does.
On the SAT: Find the value of a constant that makes a line tangent, parallel, or pass through a certain point.
y=x^2-3x-10, then scroll to zoom and drag to move around. This is the real calculator you will use on the SAT.