Hi,
(got a link to your app via @michael-spengler)
I was looking for a quick flashcard learning app for my son for his Latin excercises.
There are of course a number of paid vocabulary exercise apps available that even include the exact books/chapters used in school. But as the teachers often deviate from the course book and handout other learning map leaflets, a versatile flashcard app like yours is better.
The problem then shifts towards the ability to easily create, import, and manipulat the questionaire content. If you are lucky, you get the leaflets in word or pdf, otherwise in a papercopy. Most often you have to assemble the content with copy&paste or typing it in yourself. And in these 80% cases the easiest I think would be to connect the app to popular tools like google sheets, not only for reading the card data (but also storing the performance meta data, naybe in an adjacent worksheet). By reusing such popular tools, crowd sourcing the decks becomes easier as well, think about pupils who could then together collaborate (without the knowledge of csv, json, git etc.).
Btw. after a very quick search into the topic, I currently settled for https://github.com/tianshanghong/awesome-anki .
https://flippity.net/ seems to run on Google Sheets (and has numerous other ideas as well), but seems disfunctinal at this time.
Hi,
(got a link to your app via @michael-spengler)
I was looking for a quick flashcard learning app for my son for his Latin excercises.
There are of course a number of paid vocabulary exercise apps available that even include the exact books/chapters used in school. But as the teachers often deviate from the course book and handout other learning map leaflets, a versatile flashcard app like yours is better.
The problem then shifts towards the ability to easily create, import, and manipulat the questionaire content. If you are lucky, you get the leaflets in word or pdf, otherwise in a papercopy. Most often you have to assemble the content with copy&paste or typing it in yourself. And in these 80% cases the easiest I think would be to connect the app to popular tools like google sheets, not only for reading the card data (but also storing the performance meta data, naybe in an adjacent worksheet). By reusing such popular tools, crowd sourcing the decks becomes easier as well, think about pupils who could then together collaborate (without the knowledge of csv, json, git etc.).
Btw. after a very quick search into the topic, I currently settled for https://github.com/tianshanghong/awesome-anki .
https://flippity.net/ seems to run on Google Sheets (and has numerous other ideas as well), but seems disfunctinal at this time.