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Be polite and kind. Posts that are off-topic will be removed. Rude or snarky comments will be removed. I maintain a note file(I use org-mode) and an Anki deck when learning a subject. Each has its own characters.
A note file can be well organised, which means it can be easy to consult and refer to, while an Anki deck is a mess. But the benefit of Anki, of course, is that once you add a note, you know for sure it's your knowledge now! But adding same piece of information to both of them can be tedious. Also, when you modify one piece of note, for they're not synchronized, you have to change them both. I've tried org-drill, but it contaminates the once clean note and the note format designed for a note file and a SRS could differ. So experienced you, any idea on what types of knowledge should be put into Anki and what types of knowledge are suitable for a note file? Any aspects I missed about this subject?
And more generally, what's your proud studying workflow benefitting you for years! Depends on a subject. Anki is for stuff that needs drilling. For subjects which require understanding I just keep a collection of files which concisely explain everything I've figured out.
I don't drill these. If I need them again I just read them. One thing you can do if you want a collection of notes separately is semi-automate the updates:. Have a field 'Notes' in your cards.
Have a collection of facts which can appear in one or more cards. Each fact should be prepended by a line that lists all possible keys for this fact: 椀,碗,鋺,椀 used for tea, and lately for a variety of foods such as rice. Have a python script that compiles the above into 椀 used for tea, and lately for a variety of foods such as rice.
碗 used for tea, and lately for a variety of foods such as rice.Another note for this card from somewhere else. In Anki, run 'import from tab-separate file', set it to match by your key field and update only your 'Notes' field. The rest of the fields will be kept intact. Keep a backup of your deck in case you screw up and rewrite some other field.
Depending on how good your python-fu is, you might even skip the 4-th step and write directly into Anki DB. Anki keeps data in SQLite which is well accessible.
I haven't tried this yet. Well I'm currently going through the よく使い順漢字2100 book and manually putting all the example vocab into an excel sheet to then put into anki. All I have is the vocab field, the english meaning and then a 'jsound' field which I populate later (in bulk) with sound files generated by the anki awesomeTTS add-on. Small thing but I use the 'Hannotate SC' font because it stops kanji and kana looking like shit. Every so often I will change the card fonts to keep things fresh.
I'm sure some people think learning kanji in isolation but I just make sure to have the 2 or 3 most common readings for a kanji covered in my vocab entries and then anything obscure can be learned on a case-by-case basis as and when it comes up.
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