Sort of. I can see two possibilities:
1) You can collaboratively work on software that will dynamically generate a deck based off of combinations of various snippets and elements. So you'd be writing a program, rather than the cards itself.
2) A deck can be imported from a comma-delimited list, and I think you can export to that, too. So, someone could import, add some cards, export, and commit the diffs. I think.
Curt
Is there the notion of collaboratively
working on a deck?
I see that they are stored as SQLite files, so we can't simply put
it in a Git repository.
(You see, I'm still completely new to Anki)
Urs
Am 02.10.2013 09:32, schrieb Curt:
I've made a few decks using perl scripting. One for guitar
fretboard note identification, and two for jazz theory. But not
for actual lilypond concepts/syntax - I can see how that would be
useful.
Hi list,
I'm curious if anybody has some experience using Anki in
conjunction with LilyPond.
I've just discovered Anki and ponder over how useful it
could be for me.
As I've seen this LilyPond add-on:
https://github.com/frostschutz/Anki-LilyPond
I thought this could be terrific for creating musical
teaching material.
And I thought whether this could be made useful for
tutorial material about LilyPond itself (maybe a shared
deck of Anki cards accompanying the Learning Manual).
Any ideas?
Urs
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