Curator vs. Google Sheets
Sheets is where your data lives.
Curator is how you question it.
Google Sheets is great for collecting, sharing, and lightly crunching data. When the question gets real — joins across tabs, distributions, plain-English asks — Curator connects to your sheet and answers it, writing the Python and showing you the exact code. No QUERY() or pivot tables required.
Past the formula bar
Both hold your data. Only one writes (and shows) the analysis for you.
| Curator | Google Sheets | |
|---|---|---|
| Ask in plain EnglishNo formula syntax to learn or debug. | Formulas & QUERY() | |
| Generates the analysis for you | Readable Python | You write the formulas |
| Handles large datasets smoothly | Runs in a worker | Slows / caps on big sheets |
| Join across tabs & files | Auto-detects keys | VLOOKUP / QUERY, manual |
| Reproducible, auditable steps | Manual, easy to fumble | |
| Real-time collaboration & sharing | Not the focus | |
| Free to start | 30 questions / month |
See your own data, with its code.
Open the workbench, ask a real question, and read the Python that answered it. Free to start.
Try Curator free