anki-editor
Emacs minor mode for making Anki cards with Org (by louietan)
code-review
Code Reviews in Emacs (by wandersoncferreira)
Our great sponsors
anki-editor | code-review | |
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17 | 15 | |
677 | 448 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 1 year ago | 6 months ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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.
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.
anki-editor
Posts with mentions or reviews of anki-editor.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-05-29.
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Is orgmode really that much better than an equivalent workflow using vim + other tools?
Also, I sometimes use flashcards, they really help me to remember the material. I am creating flashcards using a package called anki-edior. My flashcards are my notes. I don't need to go somewhere else to search through my flashcards.
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Using emacs as a study environment
If you are interested in the spaced-repetition learning approach, you can try org-drill and you will use Emacs for notes production and repetition; if, like me, you prefer integrating your workflow with Anki, there's anki-editor, "a minor mode for making Anki cards with Org": the repo here. This way, you will create notes in Emacs but the repetition will be done in Anki (which means you can use Ankidroid on your phone for studying what you wrote in Emacs)
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Org-Drill vs Anki?
I do however create all my decks in Emacs' Org mode using louietan/anki-editor and export to Anki via the plugin FooSoft/anki-connect. This way I never worry about my decks getting corrupted. I actually just have one large deck but anki-editor allows me to separate my deck into separate org files which is convenient.
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Doing cards outside of Anki apps?
Sure. I write my cards in Emacs' Org mode and specifically the louietan/anki-editor minor mode. Org mode is a markup file format like markdown (but superior IMHO as it is more intuitive). With anki-editor I can export my plaintext cards to HTML by Org-mode’s HTML export backend (it has many others) with specific markers (e.g. latex) translated to Anki style. I do this with Anki open and the Anki-Connect plugin installed. It is this plugin that allows the anki-editor to push the cards to Anki. Within Anki I use the provided sync function to sync my cards with my phone. I only ever edit the cards via Emacs as anki-editor only pushes to Anki it does not pull from it.
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Org-mode notes to anki, thanks to org-anki
A blog post would be much more useful for this kind of thing. Here's a similar post using anki-editor:
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anki cards -> storage method? also how to be efficient? 🤨
I write my cards in plaintext (Emacs Org mode via anki-editor) and push them to Anki via anki-connect. The advantages for me are:
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PDF Note Style UI/UX in Remnote
create Anki cards with Emac's anki-editor and push them to Anki with anki-connect. There is also a markdown equivalent of anki-editor if you prefer that format plus packages to perform your SRS within Emacs itself such as org-drill, org-fc and pamparam.
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Package to return all buffers modified since a function has run
Here's my use case: I'm maintaining Anki notes in my Org files using the anki-editor package. Every few hours during the day, I like to sync my Anki notes from Emacs to Anki using the following code:
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What's a good way to learn the available keybindings?
For learning: I put the ones I can't "just" remember into Anki, a FOSS flashcard system based on spaced repetition (for example, the front of a card would be "emacs org: how do you toggle a checkbox?", and the back would be "C-c C-x C-b"). I use anki-editor-mode to make this faster. Then I do an Anki review every day.
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SRS inside Emacs: your suggestions?
Anki-editor https://github.com/louietan/anki-editor
code-review
Posts with mentions or reviews of code-review.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-05-29.
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Is orgmode really that much better than an equivalent workflow using vim + other tools?
Besides all that, I'm also having to take care of my work duties. When I started my day earlier, as per usual, I opened gh-notify buffer to check all GitHub notifications. Issues, Pull-requests. Using code-review I quickly checked a few PRs, scrolled through the diffs, posted a couple of comments, and approved the PRs.
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Perfect workflow with Emacs, Org and Cron
If I want to review a PR, there's code-review.
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Can you settle this for me once and for all? What can emacs do that neovim+plugins can't?
Hit Ctrl-p from comment up into diff in code-review, hit RET to go directly to real file in correct place (feature not yet implemented)
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GitHub and Doom Emacs
The second problem is reviewing PRs. The best Emacs package for that today is code-review.el. I briefly talked about it a while ago https://twitter.com/iLemming/status/1463317344437121025
- [v0.0.6] Code review release - Bitbucket Cloud support finally here!
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Support to code review Bitbucket Cloud PRs
Happy to say that my initial goal to support Github, Gitlab & Bitbucket is finally coming together. This PR https://github.com/wandersoncferreira/code-review/pull/156 includes basic bitbucket review workflow to the package.
- [v0.0.5] Code Review package
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[v0.0.4] Code Review package
As long as there are only two contributors (of which only one has signfiicant contributions), why not add it to ELPA? If the author reads this and is interested, send an email to emacs-devel.
- [v0.0.3] Code Review package
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Reply to comments in code review using wandersoncferreira/code-review
I'm trying to use wandersoncferreira/code-review to do GitHub code reviews from Emacs. As a review author, I'd like to reply to comments reviewers have made. If I on such a comment in the *Code Review* buffer, I get a new buffer where I can write my own comment. I do C-c C-c when I'm done. My comments then shows up in the *Code Review* buffer. But how do I submit my comments to GitHub. I have tried a number of M-x calls but non of them is working for me. How do I submit my comment replies? I really like the package by the way, It's great to be able to do code reviews from inside Emacs.
What are some alternatives?
When comparing anki-editor and code-review you can also consider the following projects:
org-drill
magit - It's Magit! A Git Porcelain inside Emacs.
org-noter - Emacs document annotator, using Org-mode
gist.el - Yet another Emacs paste mode, this one for Gist.
emacs-habitica - Emacs Extension for Habitica
toc-org - toc-org is an Emacs utility to have an up-to-date table of contents in the org files without exporting (useful primarily for readme files on GitHub)
anki.el - Emacs Anki Client
github-review - Github code reviews with Emacs.
org-fc - Spaced Repetition System for Emacs org-mode
neogit - An interactive and powerful Git interface for Neovim, inspired by Magit
org-anki - Sync org notes to Anki via AnkiConnect
git-link - Emacs package to get the GitHub/Bitbucket/GitLab/... URL for a buffer location