Our protagonist starts by revisiting the Atomic Structure . The "story" here is about invisible building blocks. The authors explain that everything around us is built on a logic so precise it can be mapped on a Periodic Table . The student spends nights using GDZ to verify their electron configurations, ensuring every "orbital" is in its rightful place.

The phrase "" refers to "Ready Homework Assignments" ( Gotovye Domashnie Zadaniya ) for the 10th-grade Chemistry textbook authored by N.N. Nurakhmetov, K.B. Bekishev, and N.A. Zagranichnaya , published by the Mektep publishing house in Kazakhstan.

The story ends not with a "The End," but with an exam. The Mektep textbook, now dog-eared and highlighted, sits on the desk. Thanks to the steady guidance of the authors and the late-night checks against the GDZ , the student isn't just looking at symbols anymore—they are seeing the chemistry of the world.

Halfway through the year, the "story" moves to the laboratory. Using the guidelines from Mektep , the student observes Chemical Reactions . There are moments of suspense—waiting for a solution to change color or for a gas to bubble. When a lab report is due, the GDZ serves as a vital "checkpoint," helping the student understand why an experiment might have gone wrong and how to fix the equations.

The story begins on the first day of school, when a student opens the thick, blue-covered textbook. The authors—Nurakhmetov, Bekishev, and Zagranichnaya—become silent mentors, guiding the reader from the familiar world of Class 9 into the microscopic depths of Class 10.

As the semester continues, the plot thickens with Chemical Bonding . It’s a story of attraction and repulsion. The student learns why atoms share electrons like friends (covalent) or steal them like rivals (ionic). The math gets harder; the Mole Concept introduces calculations that feel like solving a puzzle.