Key takeaways
- MCP lets an assistant call Nindo as a tool.
- Setup is a one-time connector configuration.
- Ask for questions in plain language — no prompt crafting.
- Generated questions arrive as drafts you approve.
AI assistants are great at drafting questions, but copying them out of a chat and reformatting them for a test is its own chore. Nindo's MCP server removes that gap entirely: your assistant writes the questions directly into your question bank.
What MCP is
MCP — the Model Context Protocol — is an open standard that lets AI assistants call external tools. Nindo runs an MCP server, so an assistant like Claude or ChatGPT can use Nindo as a tool and create questions in your bank, instead of just printing them in a conversation.
Connecting it
- 01Copy the Nindo MCP endpoint from your settings.
- 02Paste it into your assistant's connector settings — a one-time setup under a minute.
- 03Describe what you want in a normal sentence: topic, difficulty, count, and batch.
- 04Review the generated drafts in Nindo, then publish them to any test.
“Create 5 medium MCQs on the French Revolution for Batch NEET-A.” — that's the whole prompt.
Why it's better than copy-paste
Because the questions land structured — with options, the correct answer, and a place for explanations — there's no reformatting. They're immediately reusable across tests, searchable in your bank, and consistent with everything else you've built. Combined with extraction from old papers, you have two fast paths to a deep, high-quality question bank: digitize what exists, and generate what's missing.
See it for yourself — start free in minutes.