![]() Perhaps this is right for something like learning the vocabulary of a foreign language A hotkey would just make it faster when starting a new book. I want Anki to replicate that so I think I'll use decks unless I'm just memorizing masses of terminology. I can still think of the page I wrote for proofs of trigonometric identities and trigonometric derivatives/integrals two years ago and remember the relative positions of the different prompts and what proof methods I used. Perhaps this is right for something like learning the vocabulary of a foreign language, but I found the locational info extremely useful for memory. When you need to recall the word or phrase outside Anki, you won’t have the luxury of being shown related content first!" This makes it easier to answer the cards, as you can guess them from the context, which leads to weaker memories. Whether it’s because you’re clicking on each deck in turn (which is slow) or you’ve added a number of decks under a single parent deck, you’ll end up seeing all the “chapter 1” or “food verb” cards together. "Lots of little decks mean you end up reviewing cards in a recognizable order. The problem was doing spaced repetition manually got really tedious and hard to keep track of the more and more pages like this I had. While/after reading a chapter I would write numbered prompts on a page titled after the chapter (e.g., "state 'x' theorem", "prove 'x' theorem", "define 'x' object") to really solidify my knowledge. I think I've read of a plugin that converts subdecks to hierarchical tags which could make switching convenient.Ĭreating lots of decks is what I've been doing since it is most similar to what I was doing on paper manually before I used Anki, which I intended to replace it. Users that routinely delete their posts once they receive an answer might be excluded from participating on the sub. Posts that are off-topic will be removed.
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