ebisu
yomichan-with-example-sentences
ebisu | yomichan-with-example-sentences | |
---|---|---|
4 | 9 | |
303 | 3 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 10.0 | |
3 months ago | over 2 years ago | |
Python | JavaScript | |
The Unlicense | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
ebisu
-
Anki – Powerful, intelligent flash cards
I really wish something like https://github.com/fasiha/ebisu becomes the norm. That is, the idea of fitting the cards to your time (by prioritising) rather than you having to do everything there software wants.
The only bit missing is some algorithm deciding how often to introduce new cards based on your historical data.
-
FSRS: A modern, efficient spaced repetition algorithm
It seems from the description that FSRS still puts an exact review date on each card? This feature was pretty much the reason why I stopped using Anki. I'm not in college and not doing exams, I just want to practice when I feel like it, maybe with large breaks between sessions, and not feel like there's a backlog building up.
I think Anki is a great app, I just wish there was an algorithm that would just randomly sample cards (with probability proportional to how urgently you need to review it) rather than put a review date on them. Something like https://github.com/fasiha/ebisu but available as an Anki plugin (if that supports custom algorithms on mobile yet?) or a similar app with an open format for cards.
-
Study Sets: The reason why cards repeat a lot (algorithm explanation)
"GoodNotes uses the Ebisu algorithm for its spaced repetition feature. Ebisu uses a Bayesian model to estimate the probability of remembering a given flashcard, which allows faster adaptation to changes in recall ability. Both algorithms have been shown to be effective in practice, you can learn more about Ebisu at https://fasiha.github.io/ebisu/ "
-
Am I using Anki wrong?
This is a fundamental issue with SM-2 and how ease factors work. I personally have my Anki settings set up such that there is no ease factor penalty, though I will be working on porting Ebisu v3 to Anki's v3 scheduler once it's ready, which should finally allow us to have proper adaptive ease factors for cards (on all platforms) without the ease hell problem.
yomichan-with-example-sentences
-
Anki – Powerful, intelligent flash cards
To generate: if you're trying to learn Japanese, you can use the Yomichan [1] (or Yomitan now that Yomichan [2] has been sunset) extension for Chrome or Firefox which integrates with Anki so you can create a card for a word you don't know with two key presses.
[1] https://foosoft.net/projects/yomichan/
-
Show HN: Kimchi Reader – Immersive Korean Learning with a Popup Dictionary
For Japanese, the browser extensions Yomichan[0] (Chrome-clones and Firefox) and 10ten[1] (Safari macOS/iOS, Chrome-clones, Firefox) function similarly. There’s a few other community-built tools that are made to work with these extensions like mokuro[2] and subadub[3].
[0]: https://foosoft.net/projects/yomichan/
- Recomendaciones para ir aprendiendo japonés mientras abren inscripciones en cursos?
-
Where do you learn pitch patterns?
Use Yomichan with the Kanjium pitch accents dictionary installed (on that page).
-
How to make learning vocab through games a little less tedious?
I think anything you can use yomichan with could be very helpful since you don't need to worry about searching manually for kanji or use OCR. (don't know if there's any way to really use it with games other than visual novels though). Having the ability to just instantly get a definition pulled up for anything is so useful and saves a lot of time (not to mention using it for adding cards to anki in an instant).
-
As a non-native speaker, I got tired of Googling words I don’t know. So I made an app that lets you easily look up words in subtitles, games, and anywhere on your Mac's screen without switching apps
For Japanese the most popular add on is called Yomichan, which has Firefox and Chrome versions: https://foosoft.net/projects/yomichan/
-
Studying for years, still struggling at N5
I also recommend you install Yomichan so you can look up definitions of words while you read in the browser. Spend 15 minutes (at first) per day just getting used to the wording of sentences, then when you feel like it's hard but not impossible then ramp that up to 1+ hours per day. You won't make decent progress if you don't read, and there's never a bad time to start.
-
I was a complete beginner in Japanese just a year ago. Now I've finally mined 10.000 cards in Anki, I understand the written language fluently and paid 0$ for it.
But anyways it's a the best dictionary I've ever seen, I'd recommend to consider using it in case if you need some example sentences or you're completely stuck at understanding a word. For Japanese-English dictionaries I know only these ones: https://foosoft.net/projects/yomichan/
-
Yomichan how to have example sentences?
the only thing I was able to find is this https://github.com/egegungordu/yomichan-with-example-sentences, but it is not exactly what you are looking for
What are some alternatives?
ent.hpp - A header-only library that applies various tests to sequences of bytes stored in files and reports the results of those tests. The class is useful for evaluating pseudorandom number generators for encryption and statistical sampling applications, compression algorithms, and other applications where the information density of a file is of interest.
yomitan - Japanese pop-up dictionary extension for Chrome and Firefox. Fork of yomichan.
dekki - An ML based spaced repetition algorithm to help you learn faster and remember longer.
option-pricer - Option pricing using Black-Scholes model, Bachelier model, Binomial Trees and Monte Carlo simulation under different stochastic processes
Midnight - Midnight Score Probabilities using a Monte Carlo Simulation
monaco - Quantify uncertainty and sensitivities in your computer models with an industry-grade Monte Carlo library.
LearningCards - Simple collaborative online version of learning/flash cards
vocabsieve - Simple sentence mining tool for language learning
anki-ultimate-geography - Geography flashcard deck for Anki
pyfeflow - :ocean:Open Source Package for the FEFLOW-Python
bayesian-testing - Bayesian A/B testing