apy
anki-connect
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apy | anki-connect | |
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14 | 28 | |
204 | 1,858 | |
- | - | |
8.5 | 0.0 | |
5 days ago | 4 months ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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apy
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trrc, a command-line program to create Anki cards using AnkiConnect API.
FYI, you may be interested to know there are other alternatives. I made apy, which is a cli tool in a similar spirit to yours, except it does not rely on AnkiConnect. I've also written a section in the README where I list other similar tools.
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anki.nvim - plugin for creating and adding Anki cards directly from Neovim
That's reasonable. I use Vim with apy, of course, but my workflow is CLI centerred: I run the apy commands in the terminal, but for editing and adding cards, I use Vim. I believe I've described my workflow... ah, yes, here: https://github.com/lervag/apy/wiki/Vim
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Is there spaced repetision tool plugin for vim?
Since you use Vim and Anki, you may also be interested in apy. I made it to simplify creating and editing Anki cards. It relies on Markdown and makes it easy to add code snippets in questions and answers.
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flashcards.nvim: Neovim plugin for creating and studying flashcards
I've made apy to make it easier for people who like to work in a terminal and with Vim/neovim to make and maintain flashcards in Anki. I combine it with some utility functions within neovim.
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Nvimanki - Neovim plugin
Cool! I'm an avid user of neovim and Anki, and I did something similar. I created apy. It skips the Connect-plugin and manipulates the Anki database directly through the Python APIs, and it allows to modify existing cards and to add new cards by use of a simple Markdown like syntax. I wrote a little bit of how I use Vim/neovim together with apy here.
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On Anki's Database
There is also apy[1] which needs an Anki installation but at least doesn't actually run the Anki process.
[1]https://github.com/lervag/apy
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anktui - add notes to anki from the terminal
It does not yet, it is missing way to many features, and also it requires anki to be open. I've never tried it, but someone in the comments mentioned apy which seems to do that :)
- Looking for Python libraries for programmatic access to Anki data
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Is there a cli tool for studying cards ?
I've developed apy out of the similar desire to build and manage my Anki decks from a CLI (without keeping Anki open in the background). But it does not allow actually reviewing the cards. Personally, I'm fine with that, since I study all my cards from my phone (Ankidroid).
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Command-line tool for adding flashcards from Markdown to Anki
Thanks, this looks interesting. Good work! In case you were not aware of it, I'll be shameless and mention my similar tool apy. Similar, but also clearly different in functionality and goal, just to make that clear.
anki-connect
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I created a program that finds out which anki cards out of 50_000 are in english and deletes them in 2 minutes
Creating a Node.js Scraper: Initially, I created a web scraper for my Anki collection using Anki Connect and Node.js. I chose Node.js because I believed that using Rust would require defining every field for the response object(later found out I was wrong). Encountered issues: My program kept crashing due to not specifying the query to be of the same type(as I am writing this I realize I could have just did if(note.field == undefined) continue;) or the TypeScript ?. Resorting to single requests: To resolve the issue, I decided to send one request per card, resulting in processing 50,000 cards, which took 15-30 minutes.
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Ankiconnect: insertReviews() function
Has anyone used the insertReviews() function before to simulate answering cards programmatically? I’m not able to find much information online regarding it (perhaps because it is relatively new). I am not confident enough in my knowledge of Anki’s review algorithm to attempt replicating its behavior on all 9 of the required inputs for each review (see the 'Manual Analysis' subsection here); wanted to reach out here to see if anyone had experience with the function they would like to share.
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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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Ask HN: Better way to create Anki cards?
Another tool I've used if you have the Anki app is the Anki-Connect plugin https://github.com/FooSoft/anki-connect
It supports curl, python, javascript, etc to add cards and supports an incredible amount of actions to interact with Anki.
Example:
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Show HN: SkillPress – Learn JavaScript via spaced repetition and active recall
Just to add a footnote to the above: I wasn't aware of https://foosoft.net/projects/anki-connect/ so what I'm thinking about is very doable right now, and probably being done.
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Anki Connect: [Errno 13] Permission denied when try to add audio
I've made a small script to make cards with audio. Following the manual at https://foosoft.net/projects/anki-connect/, I have an audio field of:
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Doing cards outside of Anki apps?
I dont think there's a public/documented Ankiweb api. You could use AnkiConnect to interface with your locally running instance of Anki: https://foosoft.net/projects/anki-connect/
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Filtering A deck of cards based on a list in Excel?
Read the AnkiConnect documentation. You can interact with AnkiConnect in any language environment you wish. I've mostly - but not exclusively - used Python. It would probably be a very forgiving way to begin.
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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.
What are some alternatives?
anki - Anki's shared backend and web components, and the Qt frontend
Textractor - Extracts text from video games and visual novels. Highly extensible.
gruvbox - Retro groove color scheme for Vim
markdown-anki-decks - Tool for converting markdown files into anki decks
anki.nvim - Neovim plugin that allows creation of Anki cards directly from neovim
Obsidian_to_Anki - Script to add flashcards from text/markdown files to Anki
flashcards.nvim - A Neovim plugin for Flashcards written in Lua
CardOverflow
genanki - A Python 3 library for generating Anki decks
Python-Query-Oxford-API-for-Anki - Query scripts using the Oxford API, intended to be used with Anki.
mdanki - Markdown to Anki converter