12/25/2023 0 Comments Ikanji touch app versus wanikaniNot sure why you would do that though, as this codebase is somewhat of a time machine and as such, in huge technical debt. If you are interested in continuing the work, feel free to do so and republish the app anywhere, with respect to the license. It will no longer be updated, patched, or supported. You have to press the refresh button just below “Preview” to get it to update.This project has reached EOL status. The preview pane resets back to its unformatted state, for both layouts. “Choose Layouts” -> add another layout, such as “Japanese -> Meaning”.Confirm that the Preview pane updates in realtime.For example, type something in “Vocabulary”, and “meaning” “Choose Layouts” -> select “Japanese -> Reading”.“Choose Template” -> “Kitsun - Japanese Vocabulary”.I signed up for a lifetime membership wanted to show my support whether I go all-in on this, or not. Otherwise, still very impressed by the product. Would love to hear any insights on how to come up with some kind of battle plan, here. My first impulse was to just skip the kanji part of this and either make hiragana cards, or kanji + furigana cards (is that supported?). One thing that makes me hesitate is that a lot of the kanji cards I would make as I go through this process are already covered by wanikani (though I haven’t gotten to many of them yet), so I would just be repeating work that is done better, elsewhere. I suppose that’s fair, but before I really commit I want to be sure I’m going about this right. I know things will speed up as I practice, but it looks like creating a wani-kani style treatment for a single chapter from Minna No Nihongo (with around 50 words) will likely take me 2-3 hours. I experimented a bit with importing anki decks, but I quickly realized that the nuanced flow of wanikani (kanji meaning, to kanji reading (prioriziting onyomi, to vocabulary meaning, to vocabulary reading) I was hoping to experience will take a lot more work. I finally started trying to make my own deck. It’s a pretty straight-forward process if you trust the people who are giving you feedback though. The main thing though is that the approval/rejection can only be done by the owner of the deck. However, a system similar to the one you described above exists! You can publish a deck and anyone who is studying the set can send you feedback on individual cards, which you can approve or reject. I know there are some decks on here for minna no nohingo, but I can’t really say whether they’re polished or not. There are a lot of very promising features! Otherwise, interesting project you have, here. all my Minna No Nihnogo decks), but I have been unable to figure out how to link them together, nor have I been able to figure out how to delete a folder. I assumed I could stick decks in there (eg. What does the “folder” system do? I made a folder, and now it’s not clear to me what to do with it. I would be much happier with some kind of system where a single deck is maintained by multiple people, with new changes moderated by trusted contributors. Minna No Nihongo 2)? If #1 above can be satisfied I’m willing to dive in and start crafting a new deck (or series of decks, one per chapter) myself, but I don’t want to wind-up lost in the scattered detritus of hundreds of half-arsed duplicated lists like you get with Anki. Is there any way for the community to sort of curate a one-true-deck for a particular textbook (ie. They have a strict “no self-evalutation” policy (you don’t pick “good” or “again” you actually have to type in an answer), which I am starting to agree with, more and more. I was expecting more of a wanikani style presentation. I tried importing one of the decent decks from my Anki collection, and it seemed to work, but when I began a “lesson” I found myself basically navigating what felt like the same-old Anki mechanics (I’m using the web app, if it matters). I was hoping that someone would have made a nicely polished series of decks for Minna No Nihongo 2, but no luck. I longed for the bright, simple confidence and sleek presentation of the curated wanikani content. No two decks seem to have been created by the same person some have mistakes, some seem to omit words (or include extras), some have audio, some don’t, some have the wrong translated language (eg. I also get lost trying to find decent content there are indeed user-created lists for most Minna No Nihongo chapters, but you never know what you’re going to get. It feels like some relic from the 90s that won’t die, no matter how many modern variants sprout from its roots. I’ve played around with Anki, but I find it too technical and obtuse. I’m currently working my way through Minna No Nihongo 2 with a tutor, and I find myself falling behind on the vocabulary. Wanikani is great, but like everyone else it’s not the only way I study. Briefly, I found my way here by way of wanikani. Hi folks, I just signed-up today, so I am the greenest of beans.
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