Primary formula
Normalize values, count exact frequencies, and return every value tied for the highest frequency when that frequency is greater than one.
Math calculator
Find the most frequent value or values in a number list with a visible frequency table.
Math calculator
Calculations run locally from the values entered. Exact rational results are shown where practical.
Find the most frequent value.
Normalize values, count exact frequencies, and return every value tied for the highest frequency when that frequency is greater than one.
Equivalent values such as 0.5 and 1/2 are counted together. A list where every value appears once has no mode. All modes tied at the highest frequency are shown.
Exact rational arithmetic is used for fraction-style values; decimal and rounded values are labelled as approximations when relevant.
Read decimal, fraction, mixed-number or list inputs from the original text.
Reduce rational values and keep denominators positive.
Apply the selected deterministic formula or algorithm.
Separate exact, decimal, rounded and warning output.
Mode Calculator is built for identifying the most frequent value or values in a data set. It keeps the calculator first, then shows the result, exact form, decimal form where useful, and a concise interpretation.
Choose the mode that matches your question, enter the values using the accepted formats, then select Calculate. Reset clears the form and result.
Use Copy, Print or Share after the result appears. The shared summary contains only the visible calculation result and method note.
Normalize values, count exact frequencies, and return every value tied for the highest frequency when that frequency is greater than one.
Inputs are parsed from their original text where possible. Fractions are normalized so the denominator is positive and the fraction is reduced by the greatest common divisor.
Finite decimals are converted from digits to a rational denominator based on the decimal scale. Repeating decimals use the repeating block rather than a binary floating-point approximation.
Decimal output is labelled separately from exact fraction output so a copied rounded value is not confused with the exact result.
The engine validates required values, converts valid entries to exact rational form, applies the selected method, then formats exact and approximate output for the page.
For 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4, both 2 and 3 appear twice, so the data set is multimodal.
Read exact fractions as the authoritative mathematical result. Decimal and rounded outputs are convenient display forms and should be treated as approximations unless the decimal terminates exactly.
Most errors come from using the wrong denominator, treating a rounded decimal as exact, or choosing a related calculator whose formula answers a different question.
The calculator solves the mathematical model entered. It does not decide whether the model is appropriate for a real-world situation.
Inputs have length and list-size limits to keep the browser responsive. Long repeating-decimal cycles are detected up to a configured cap and labelled if truncated.
This calculator provides mathematical results from the values and methods you enter. Verify important academic, engineering, financial or professional work independently.
Rounded and decimal results are approximations unless an exact fraction or integer result is shown.
It helps with identifying the most frequent value or values in a data set. The calculator shows the main result, exact form where practical, and the steps used to reach the answer.
Normalize values, count exact frequencies, and return every value tied for the highest frequency when that frequency is greater than one.
No. Fraction, decimal, ratio, proportion, average, median and mode calculations use exact rational parsing where practical. Rounding uses Decimal.js decimal arithmetic.
Yes for mathematical calculations where negatives are meaningful. The page warns when a negative value may not make sense in a real-world interpretation.
Yes. Decimal entries such as 1.25e-3 are parsed from the text input and converted exactly when the selected tool supports numeric values.
Yes. A mixed number such as -2 1/3 is interpreted as negative two and one third, or -7/3.
No. Rounded and decimal display values are approximations unless an exact fraction, integer, or terminating decimal is explicitly shown.
No. Math Phase 1 calculators run locally in the browser session and do not create accounts, databases, or public calculation history.
Verify important school, engineering, financial, academic or professional work independently, especially when a result is rounded or a real-world assumption is involved.
Mode does not describe order or numeric distance between values. Categorical text values are not supported in this numeric Phase 1 tool.
Math Phase 1 references and formula conventions reviewed on July 1, 2026.
This calculator provides mathematical results from the values and methods you enter. Verify important academic, engineering, financial or professional work independently.
Rounded and decimal results are approximations unless an exact fraction or integer result is shown.