3/4 I've used this system fairly successfully for learning A Level Chemistry and Physics, and more recently some undergraduate-level maths, making a total of around 9k cards. Perhaps not very complex knowledge, but not trivial either.
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4/4 Another thing worth considering is the trouble with having many 'atomic' cards based around a single concept - it can get difficult to change your system when a new, better understanding of that concept develops. You have to hunt around for all the related cards.
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1/2 Something I've been experimenting with as a partial solution to this is embedding my flashcards in a wiki-like system (currently using ), and adding them to Anki from there (using a script I whipped up).
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One of the arguments for such systems is that it provides a layer of organisation beyond tags and folders that more closely approximates how the knowledge is actually stored. I'm hoping to carry over the benefits of that to my Anki cards.
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Yes, I've been writing cards that way for almost a year now. It does seem to help solve the problem you describe in which you need to change the cards when your understanding improves. I can't say I understand yet.
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Yes, I saw these notes when coming into the whole zettelkasten topic! Big factor in me deciding to take up the system. I just needed something that could use a little more of Anki's features (custom note types, images...), but the principle is the same.
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As for the changing cards, my guess is that it helps with finding related cards since notes are linked together naturally. For example, you can see what lemmas/theorems are used to build up a more powerful theorem, and access those notes directly.
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I guess there's no harm in me publishing the link to the Github repository -
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Goodness, this is quite elaborate! Thank you for sharing.
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No problem! You might want to take a look at the regex.md file - I've implemented custom syntax (including a question-answer format) using regular expressions, so it's very customisable.
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It’s funny: my approach has been to create a format which has very minimal impact on the prose notes—almost trying to make the SRS cards invisible. You’ve taken quite an opposite approach!
How does it seem to affect how it feels to work with the prose?
Well, I've never been one to care too much about how my notes look (my Anki cards can attest to that!), so it's fine for me. In fact, it's nice to distinguish information that I want in an SRS system (i.e. easily retrievable) vs other knowledge that's still useful in notes.
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For example I might put a snippet about the history behind a particular concept - interesting, but not something I need to recall at all times.
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I have partially solved this in a later update that wraps the ID line in a HTML comment, so that it’s invisible when viewing the note. It’s also much easier to automate the script now - it can scan subfolders recursively and start Anki if it isn’t already running.
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