CrowdAnki
CardOverflow
Our great sponsors
CrowdAnki | CardOverflow | |
---|---|---|
10 | 12 | |
494 | 25 | |
- | - | |
6.6 | 0.0 | |
6 months ago | over 2 years ago | |
Python | F# | |
MIT License | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
CrowdAnki
- Anki and sharing decks, would Anki be a good option for a group of people all trying to add cards to a deck, or would another app be better?
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What's best way to edit a deck collaboratively?
There's no easy way as of yet. The deck Ultimate Geography is made using CrowdAnki
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Ok so my friend makes anki decks daily over our lecture of the day, and sends them to me. I don’t want her to have to take the time to send me them everyday. Is there a way for it to automatically sync on my end when she add a card without her having to export them? The sync icon didn’t work
You should take a look at this AddOn: https://github.com/Stvad/CrowdAnki
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Knowing important practical knowledge should be highly beneficial for most if not all Anki users?
The collaboration is based on Github and the plugin CrowdAnki (Which I think is amazing).
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Would anyone be interested in a social anki?
There's a serious need for tools to collaboratively build community flash cards. See /r/medicalschoolanki. However the tools they have aren't great - right now they have to collect eratta in a literal google spreadsheet. There's no native way to sync changes from a master deck to any "follower" decks. I believe that Anking is also working on this problem by building a very fancy website and plugin, ETA sometime this year I think. However even with this solution, you are required to use that deck's notes and note types. You can customize it after downloading the update, but any subsequent updates will overwrite your customizations. There are custom fields that are intended to be customized by users, but now you're stuck on that note type. Also, every deck change has to go through some central committee, and I'm trying to build something more decentralized. I'm gonna assume that Anking doesn't really want to maintain a language learning deck. With my thing, anyone can publish any deck/card, and anyone can subscribe to it, receive notifications upon updates, and be able to merge changes without overwriting their customizations. (Or, if they do, it's easily undo-able. Yay event sourcing.) There are other ways to collaboratively build decks like CrowdAnki, but it means that people have to learn git. That's kinda a nonstarter. Also with Anki, you have to share decks, not cards.
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Are there tools/plugins that support a more complete learning workflow?
However it isn't as powerful as what you're asking for. If you're looking for source control, this exists: https://github.com/Stvad/CrowdAnki
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Open Source Web port of Anki
That's a pretty good idea. It's basically taking https://github.com/Stvad/CrowdAnki and giving it a better UI.
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Modern Card Templates, including fast math typesetting and lists (without add-ons)
The templates included are more than just the ones that are shown. To use them, you simply have to get the deck, which you can either download from AnkiWeb, this is easier but might also be outdated, or you can use the CrowdAnki add-on and import straight from the GitHub repo of this project.
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80 Free Anki Decks Across 69 Languages (Xefjord's Complete Languages)
How do you make these and have you considered using something like crowdanki to host these on github? Based on your other comments it seems like you're relying on translators, which makes me think having some sort of verison control would be good. Similarly, it would let people make extended versions just by forking. You could also show the languages you're developing.
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Creating Updateable Shared Deck On Github
take a look at CrowdAnki
CardOverflow
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Ask HN: Show your failed projects and share a lesson you learned
I tried to build StackOverflow for flashcards (i.e. spaced repetition with collaboration as a first class feature.) After working on it on nights/weekends for ~2 years, I realized my architecture was shit. I started out with Blazor + F# + PostGres, but eventually I realized that syncing offline client DBs to the cloud was a very nontrivial problem. So I moved to event sourcing. Turns out that's not much better - I started to write my own IndexedDB wrapper, then said "you're a moron" and switched to CouchDb/PouchDb/RxDB. I also wanted to support plugins. I thought I figured that out with Blazor, but eventually I realized that more powerful plugins would want to manipulate the DOM directly. Blazor's virtual DOM kills that possibility. So, I'm off the dotnet ecosystem (I can't express how very, very sad I am to leave F#) and onto Typescript + SolidJS. I would've gone ReScript but that's tightly coupled to React which uses the VDom. Perhaps I should be using Svelte - I'm not solid on any of this new architecture yet. So my project has not yet entirely failed... I just realized I spent ~2 years on the wrong architecture.
The carcass of my attempt in dotnet: https://github.com/dharmaturtle/cardoverflow
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Would anyone be interested in a social anki?
FWIW I'm building something from the ground up that'll have this sharing/social thang built in. I also (obviously) think that there's a need for collaborative tools for building and sharing cards, along with perhaps ways to publish your progress. For various reasons I'm not building it on Anki though.
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If you had investors willing to write you a blank check to build the best spaced repetition program possible, how would you go about it? Asking for a friend based on a discussion we’ve been having.
I'm building the above thing here: https://github.com/dharmaturtle/cardoverflow
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SAAS strategies for offline mode
Not only considered - I'm actively using it. You'll find people complaining about IndexedDB's API all over the internet. They're right - it's remarkably terrible. I'm using Dexie.JS as a wrapper over it.
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Anyone in the Chicago area interested in a meet up?
I'm working on an open source edtech website. Prelaunch, but I wouldn't mind talking shop. In the western suburbs.
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Confessions of a 0.8x Developer
My dude, speaking as someone who gets really happy when they find a functor in their code, I fully disagree with your last paragraph. You can do FP without knowing anything about the theory. Telling someone that they should read up on a dry, boring academic topic in order to be a better programmer is kinda a nonstarter. When you start throwing around stuff like "You should learn category theory and homotopy theory to really understand FP" only drives people away - it doesn't inspire curiosity (in most people).
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Successful SaaS owner looking to take on other projects.
I'm working on an edtech thing - think StackOverflow/Wikipedia for flashcards. Basically, there's a way to remember an exponential amount of information - it just isn't popular because the existing software is terrible. Despite the terrible software, it is very popular among med students, since they have to cram so much info into their heads.
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Show HN: Anki alternative with integrated notes and import/export
> I also hate that the anki shared decks web site does not encourage collaboration...
Dude, I'm building exactly this. I'm not basing it on git for various reasons, but I am using event sourcing, and git is basically event sourcing for code. My system will (eventually) allow pull requests, comments, upvotes/downvotes, and all kinds of community shenanigans on flash cards. It's months away from release... but here's the repo if you wanna have a look: https://github.com/dharmaturtle/cardoverflow
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SRS web app for teachers/classrooms
Here's another link that I recently saw about something related which is most likely not interesting for you. Just in case: https://www.reddit.com/r/Anki/comments/nalar8/open_source_web_port_of_anki/ which is about https://github.com/dharmaturtle/CardOverflow
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Open Source Web port of Anki
OK, found https://github.com/dharmaturtle/CardOverflow
What are some alternatives?
logseq - A local-first, non-linear, outliner notebook for organizing and sharing your personal knowledge base. Use it to organize your todo list, to write your journals, or to record your unique life.
genanki - A Python 3 library for generating Anki decks
anki - Anki's shared backend and web components, and the Qt frontend
anki-connect - Anki plugin to expose a remote API for creating flash cards.
org-anki - Sync org notes to Anki via AnkiConnect
closet - The Web Framework for Flashcards
KaTeX - Fast math typesetting for the web.
Anki-Android - AnkiDroid: Anki flashcards on Android. Your secret trick to achieve superhuman information retention.
orbit - Experimental spaced repetition platform for exploring ideas in memory augmentation and programmable attention
Polar Bookshelf - Polar is a personal knowledge repository for PDF and web content supporting incremental reading and document annotation.