I tried (and failed) several times to take Anki up.
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But what finally made Anki "take" was frustration that I'd never really learned the Unix command line.
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For fun, I wondered if it might be possible to use Anki to essentially completely memorize a (short!) book on the command line. It was. I didn't memorize all options, but I did memorize nearly all I could imagine ever using. This was very exciting!
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A caveat: there is a difference between remembering facts and mastering processes. It's one thing to know a command; it's another to actually type the command.
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To really internalize a process, you need to actually do the process. Still, I've found the transfer relatively easy.
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(I've experimented with miming the actions while reviewing cards, but it doesn't work so well and is annoying.)
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It's best to make cards as atomic as possible.
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An example: when learning about soft linking I initially had a question "How to create a soft link?" with answer "ln -s filename linkname".
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This was too complicated --- I always stumbled on the order of filename and linkname.
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Replying to @michael_nielsen
I remember this one in particular as "the same as cp" (I know I know not the point)
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I find that kind of cross-linkage very, very helpful.
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