Difference between revisions of "Anki deck options"
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* [[Incremental reading in Anki#My deck options]] | * [[Incremental reading in Anki#My deck options]] | ||
* [[Cards created by oneself can be scheduled more aggressively]] | * [[Cards created by oneself can be scheduled more aggressively]] | ||
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+ | ==What links here== | ||
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+ | {{Special:WhatLinksHere/{{FULLPAGENAME}} | hideredirs=1}} | ||
[[Category:Spaced repetition]] | [[Category:Spaced repetition]] |
Latest revision as of 01:09, 17 July 2021
For the first year or so of using Anki (after returning to it after a several-year break), I did not modify the deck options much so that I could focus on learning how to write better cards. Since then, I've gradually learned more about the options. I think the worst option in the default Anki is the "new interval" of 0%, which means if you get a card wrong, the interval resets to the initial state. This leads to a huge amount of wasted reviews if you happen to get a card wrong, and also makes getting a card wrong feel bad.
- Deck options for small cards
- Deck options for proof cards
- Incremental reading in Anki#My deck options
- Cards created by oneself can be scheduled more aggressively
What links here
- Incremental reading in Anki (← links)
- Deck options for proof cards (← links)
- Spaced repetition allows graceful deprecation of experiments (← links)
- Ignore Anki add-ons to focus on fundamentals (← links)
- Cards created by oneself can be scheduled more aggressively (← links)
- Deck options for small cards (← links)
- Anki (← links)