A 42 inch deck stringer, laid out
A 42 inch rise is the everyday deck stair. The calculator splits it into 6 risers at 7 inches each, which leaves 5 treads. At a 10 inch tread depth, the total run is 50 inches and the stringer board runs the diagonal: the square root of 42 squared plus 50 squared, about 65.3 inches. Buy the next length up, a 6 foot 2x12, and you have room to square the cuts.
The framing-square settings are the two numbers that matter at the sawhorses: 7 inches on the tongue, 10 inches on the body. Step the square down the board six times, scribe, and cut. Trim the bottom of the stringer by one tread thickness so the first step lands at 7 inches like the rest. Skip that trim and the bottom step is an inch and a half tall, which fails the 3/8 inch uniformity rule and trips people in the dark.