Tries to gamify Anki by breaking your study session into batches of time (ex: 5 minutes) through a countdown bar.
Using these batches, we
- Show a rolling average of how much you study in the given batch
- Shows how many cards you've studied in the current batch compared to your average
- If you surpass the rolling average, a flame will appear to show you that you're on fire!
We use this to also show how long it will take to complete your review at your current pace.
-
timebox
size (in seconds) of a study batches to consider for -
countdown_colors
color of the bar as the countdown gets closer to 0 -
invert_timer
decides if countdown bar fills from left->right or right->left -
countdown_timer_as_percentage
whether or not to display the time left in batch or just the % time passed
-
include_all_study_time_for_day
whether to include the entire day's worth of study in the bar or just the current review -
show_time_till_end
show the exact time until you finish all cards
-
penalize_idle
if you got 0 points in batch, whether or not we should count it -
exponential_weight
decay for exponential weighted average -
goal_offset
how many more reviews than the exponential weighted average you hope to get this round -
initial_throughput_guess
initial goal when you just started on a deck with no prior study history -
bonus_points_by_card_type
get different amount of points based off if this card is (new, learning, due, relearn) -
number_batches_to_keep
number of batches to use to calculate moving average -
threshold_for_batch
how many answers needed in a batches to be considered for the moving average -
points_as_percentage
whether or not to show % towards reaching moving average in batch -
points_as_number
whether or not to show how many points you have in the current batch -
show_flame
whether or not to show a flame when doing better than average -
flame_height
height in pixels of the fire (width is automatically adjusted to maintain aspect ratio)