Our Content Standard
ClickTooly exists to provide practical browser-based utilities with clear explanations, not thin pages built only for search traffic. Each tool page should explain what the tool does, how the result is calculated, when the result is useful, and what the limitations are.
When a tool covers health, finance, pregnancy, tax, or other sensitive decisions, we treat the result as informational. We avoid presenting calculator output as professional advice, and we include limitations so users know when to speak with a qualified expert.
How Tools Are Built
- Client-side processing first: Tool inputs are processed in the browser whenever possible, so text, files, passwords, PDFs, health inputs, and financial entries do not need to be uploaded.
- Formula transparency: Calculators describe the formulas or assumptions they use, such as Mifflin-St Jeor for calorie estimates, Naegele's Rule for due-date estimates, and standard amortization math for loan payments.
- Behavior matches copy: Page descriptions should match the current tool interface. If a feature is not implemented, the page should not claim it exists.
- Mobile and desktop usability: Tools are designed to work on phones, tablets, and desktop browsers without requiring accounts or installations.
Review And Maintenance
We periodically review tool pages for broken functionality, outdated claims, unclear explanations, and mismatches between interface behavior and page copy. Updates are prioritized when a tool handles privacy-sensitive data, health estimates, financial calculations, or tax-related examples.
For health and finance calculators, we prefer explaining assumptions over making exact promises. Browser calculators can be useful planning aids, but they cannot account for every personal, medical, regional, or professional factor.
Sources And References
Where applicable, ClickTooly uses widely known formulas, browser platform documentation, and public reference material. Examples include the Web Crypto API for secure browser randomness, standard UUID v4 formatting rules, common mortgage amortization formulas, and established public health calculation methods.
External references may change over time. If you notice an outdated formula, unclear explanation, or regional tax detail that needs correction, contact us and include the page URL and the source you recommend.
Advertising And Independence
ClickTooly may be supported by advertising. Ads do not determine tool behavior, calculator formulas, or editorial explanations. We do not sell tool input data, and browser-processed inputs are not sent to our servers.
Corrections
To report an error, email hello@clicktooly.com or use the Contact page. Please include the affected URL, what appears incorrect, and any supporting reference. We review correction requests and update pages when a change improves accuracy, safety, or clarity.