Skip to content

Script to add flashcards from text/markdown files to Anki

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

envico801/Obsidian_to_Anki

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Obsidian_to_Anki

Plugin to add flashcards from a text or markdown file to Anki. Run in Obsidian as a plugin, or from the command-line as a python script. Built with Obsidian markdown syntax in mind. Supports user-defined custom syntax for flashcards.
See the Trello for planned features.

Getting started

Check out the Wiki! It has a ton of information, including setup instructions for new users. I will include a copy of the instructions here:

Setup

All users

  1. Start up Anki, and navigate to your desired profile.
  2. Ensure that you've installed AnkiConnect.

Obsidian plugin users

  1. Have Obsidian downloaded
  2. Search the 'Community plugins' list for this plugin
  3. Install the plugin.
  4. In Anki, navigate to Tools->Addons->AnkiConnect->Config, and change it to look like this:
{
    "apiKey": null,
    "apiLogPath": null,
    "webBindAddress": "127.0.0.1",
    "webBindPort": 8765,
    "webCorsOrigin": "http://localhost",
    "webCorsOriginList": [
        "http://localhost",
        "app://obsidian.md"
    ]
}
  1. Restart Anki to apply the above changes
  2. With Anki running in the background, load the plugin. This will generate the plugin settings.

You shouldn't need Anki running to load Obsidian in the future, though of course you will need it for using the plugin!

To run the plugin, look for an Anki icon on your ribbon (the place where buttons such as 'open Graph view' and 'open Quick Switcher' are). For more information on use, please check out the Wiki!

Python script users

  1. Install the latest version of Python.
  2. If you are a new user, download obstoanki_setup.py from the releases page, and place it in the folder you want the script installed (for example your notes folder).
  3. Run obstoanki_setup.py, for example by double-clicking it in a file explorer. This will download the latest version of the script and required dependencies automatically. Existing users should be able to run their existing obstoanki_setup.py to get the latest version of the script.
  4. Check the Permissions tab below to ensure the script is able to run.
  5. Run obsidian_to_anki.py, for example by double-clicking it in a file explorer. This will generate a config file, obsidian_to_anki_config.ini.

Permissions

The script needs to be able to:

  • Make a config file in the directory the script is installed.
  • Read the file in the directory the script is used.
  • Make a backup file in the directory the script is used.
  • Rename files in the directory the script is used.
  • Remove a backup file in the directory the script is used.
  • Change the current working directory temporarily (so that local image paths are resolved correctly).

Features

Current features (check out the wiki for more details):

  • Custom note types - You're not limited to the 6 built-in note types of Anki.
  • Custom scan directory
    • The plugin will scan the entire vault by default
    • You can also set which directory (includes all sub-directories as well) to scan via plugin settings
  • Ignore Folders and Files
    • You can specify which files and folders to ignore
    • This can be done in the settings of this plugin with Glob syntax.
    • If you're working on your own globs, you can test them out here
    • Examples:
      • **/*.excalidraw.md - Ignore all files that end in .excalidraw.md
        • => avoids excalidraw files from being scanned which can be extremely slow
      • Template/** - Ignore all files in the Template folder (including subfolders)
      • **/private/** - Ignore all files in folders that are called private no matter where they are in the vault
      • [Pp]rivate*/** - Ignore all files and folders in the root of the vault that start with private or with Private
  • Updating notes from file - Your text files are the canonical source of the notes.
  • Tags, including tags for an entire file.
  • Adding to user-specified deck on a per-file basis.
  • Markdown formatting.
  • Math formatting.
  • Embedded images. GIFs should work too.
  • Audio.
  • Auto-deleting notes from the file.
  • Reading from all files in a directory automatically - recursively too!
  • Inline Notes - Shorter syntax for typing out notes on a single line.
  • Easy cloze formatting - A more compact syntax to do Cloze text
  • Frozen Fields
  • Obsidian integration - A link to the file that made the flashcard, full link and image embed support.
  • Custom syntax - Using regular expressions, add custom syntax to generate notes that make sense for you. Some examples:
    • RemNote single-line style. This is how to use::Remnote single-line style
      Remnote 1
    • Header paragraph style.
    # Style
    This style is suitable for having the header as the front, and the answer as the back
    
    Header 1
    • Question answer style.
    Q: How do you use this style?
    A: Just like this.
    
    Question 1
    • Neuracache #flashcard style.
    In Neuracache style, to make a flashcard you do #flashcard
    The next lines then become the back of the flashcard
    
    Neuracache 1
    • Ruled style
    How do you use ruled style?
    ---
    You need at least three '-' between the front and back of the card.
    
    Ruled 1
    • Markdown table style
    | Why might this style be useful? |
    | ------ |
    | It looks nice when rendered as HTML in a markdown editor. |
    
    Table 2
    • Cloze paragraph style
    The idea of {cloze paragraph style} is to be able to recognise any paragraphs that contain {cloze deletions}.
    
    Cloze 1

Note that all custom syntax is off by default, and must be programmed into the script via the config file - see the Wiki for more details.

Buy Me a Coffee at ko-fi.com

About

Script to add flashcards from text/markdown files to Anki

Resources

License

Code of conduct

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 67.7%
  • TypeScript 30.3%
  • Other 2.0%