1/8/2024 0 Comments Cloze anki![]() Many verbs have two or more very different meanings, each of which is often used in speech. ![]() you can train meanings that are lost when we train a word without context.It is great exercise for translation from native to foreign language. In my cards I not only think, but also type words. Programm show you a sentence with skipped places and you think, which words have to match. You can skip a word or some words or whole sentence. ![]() And not simply Cloze, but with typing answer.Ĭloze is a special note’s type. Next time I’ll tell you about automatic sound for your cards. Right now I’ve half a mind to import and review my lecture videos using a Video NLE app and set tags/timestamps that way.Previously, I told you how to use a ready-made deck, how to set up your own cards, about useful functions. It’d be great if I could just qucikly split a clip by which exercise or problem was worked on, and which questions might have been asked in class by students, and note when important exam info came up. I’m waiting for someone to build Descript with LaTeX support at a price cheap enough that I can throw my lecture note-taking into it. LaTeX’s layout support is inferior to HTML when it comes to mixing with other content, though.įor really advanced uses, let me tag the example with a video clip of the prof walking through the exercise, though that’s more useful if you had features like Descript, say. the back side of a card - that in those circumstances, you might use a grid or table to display the front side in one “block” and the back side in another “block”, side-by-side rather than one above and the other below? If you happened to have a math equation in the front side and another such block equation on the back side, your card would look pretty weird right now.Īnother way of putting it, LaTeX being somewhat flexible for layout, I could almost imagine an advanced card builder with cloze support where all you do is write markdown and/or LaTeX such as in the Obsidian spaced repetition plugin, say. Might I also suggest a different appearance for block math equations that are part of a card - e.g. more control over equation line numbering, referencing equation lines by line number, or selecting part of an equation to reference or highlight it later? All rather interesting if you ask me – perhaps a sneak peek at what better support for math might look like inside RemNote? E.g. The numbering starts by default from where it left off last time. It’s fascinating that when you use the align block, you get numbering for “free” along the right side of the latex block but not for every block equation, only the ones with lines inside align blocks - e.g. I look forward to the day when everyone can study any subject using little effort in RemNote. ![]() I might normally use images, but it’s convenient to make minor edits sometimes to the steps of an equation to make steps clearer, sometimes, and making LaTeX is pretty easy if you have MathPix installed, and I don’t really look forward to having to drag and drop so many boxes one after the other to use image-based fill in the blanks/clozes. This wouldn’t provide the context of the line that comes next, though… Right now the only approach I can think of besides making images and using image-fill-in-the-blanks manually would be to maybe indent each line such that subsequent cards show the previous line as a parent card. I imagine the way this could work - ideally - is that I could mark a latex block or set of nested bullets as a cloze-list – it would identify each line in a latex block math equation, and create a cloze for each line or some approach where I could use inline equations (which sometimes don’t look as nice as block ones) and use regular cards or a list of cards, where each list item is acts like a cloze/fill-in-the-blank. And it would be ideal if I could use a block equation because then things would like up nicely at the equals signs. But it doesn’t seem to work when inline equations are involved. That works with regular text-based clozes (fill-in-the-blank). A similar approach might work for memorizing poetry or song lyrics - just hide one line but show the rest of the stanza, and quiz yourself on the hidden line in the song or poem.
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