Excellent, I had no idea this would spark so much interest. I just noticed the link to Anki on Wikipedia; seems very low profile beside that which is a shame for something that's shaping up so nicely.
Anki is a Python application, and so is Mnemosyne, so perhaps the two could come together in some way.
Within Anki's sources there is an implementation of SM-5 scheduling algorithm but it defaults to using its own "Anki algorithm" which apparently works better when the collection grows really big (according to comments in the code).
Anki is a Python application, and so is Mnemosyne, so perhaps the two could come together in some way.
Within Anki's sources there is an implementation of SM-5 scheduling algorithm but it defaults to using its own "Anki algorithm" which apparently works better when the collection grows really big (according to comments in the code).
