For any firm looking to reduce spreadsheet errors, standardize design outputs, and free up senior engineers from re-checking basic arithmetic, Tedds is not just a utility—it is a professional necessity. It ensures that while the computer does the heavy lifting, the engineer remains the final authority.

In the diverse ecosystem of structural engineering software, a clear divide has traditionally existed. On one side lie the "back-of-the-envelope" manual calculations and Excel spreadsheets; on the other sit high-end Finite Element Analysis (FEA) packages like Ansys or Abaqus. For decades, the critical middle ground—repetitive, code-specific element design—was often a laborious mix of both.