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Anki-like flashcard management tool for the terminal!

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Goki

A terminal-based spaced repetition flashcard tool.

Now supports OpenAI API Integration and...

  • Importing decks from Anki and csv's!
  • Reviewing from TUI and Terminal!

Screenshot example of Goki

Theme: material default-community

Goki is an intelligent flashcard management tool inspired by Anki built in the terminal!

Table of contents

TUI Demo

Launch by running goki:

goki_demo.mov

Goki features a Spaced Repetion Algorithm which uses user feedback on card difficulty to effectively space out practice sessions.

Key Mappings

Home Page
Action Keybinding
Review Decks Flashcards r
Create New Deck N
Generate a Deck using GPT G
View Deck Card List o
Edit Deck Name e
Delete Deck d
Move Up up arrow,k
Move Down down arrow,j
Toggle Help Menu ?
Quit q,ctrl+c
Flashcard List Page
Action Keybinding
Move Up up arrow,k
Move Down down arrow,j
Next page right arrow,l
Previous Page left arrow,h
Search Flashcards /
New Card n
Edit Card e
Delete Card d
Undo Deleted Card u
Create/Edit Flashcard Form
Action Keybinding
Next Field / Submit enter
Previous Field tab
Exit Form esc
Flashcard
Action Keybinding
Exit Review esc
Show Back o
Flashcard needs repeated again 1
Flashcard took some thought 2
Flashcard was easy to remember 3

Installation

Using go:

go install github.com/abeleinin/goki@latest

Build from source (go 1.13+)

git clone https://github.com/abeleinin/goki.git
cd goki
go build

Examples

OpenAI API Integration

goki_vhs_gpt_demo_audio.mp4

Supports:

  • Generating decks from text or markdown files using stdin
  • Generating arbitrary decks from a <prompt> in CLI and TUI

Goki uses gpt-4-turbo-preview. Set the OPENAI_API_KEY environment variable to a valid OpenAI key. You can generate one here.

There are two ways to generate decks using the API. First, you can use stdin to generate a deck from your notes:

goki --gpt < my_notes.txt
goki --gpt "my prompt"

Or from the TUI, you can use the G key to be prompted to type some content on the bottom of the screen relating to the deck you want to generate. Testing has been limited, so please report any bugs or errors that occur.

Import from CSV

Import from stdin

Using the pipe operator < to feed flashcard data in as stdin. Apply a custom name with the -n flag, or a default name will be assigned. -t flag assigns the data seperation character, comma , separation is the default.

goki < flashcards.csv                      # default sep=','
goki -t < flashcards.txt                   # use -t to set sep='\t'
goki -n "My Deck Name" < flashcards.csv
goki -n "My Deck Name" -t < flashcards.txt

Here is an example of data formatting. Only rows with 2 elements will be parsed, the first as the question and second as answer.

"Question","Answer"
Question    Answer

Import from Anki

Export as Notes in Plain Text (.txt) in Anki, which generates a tab \t separated text file. Run the follow on the exported file.

goki -n "My Anki Cards" -t < anki.txt

Reviewing Flashcards

Press r on the selected deck you want to review on the home page. Or use the command goki review <deck index> to review from the CLI.

Review from CLI:

Review deck in cli

Review from TUI:

Review deck in tui

Creating Decks

Press N in the home page. Use e to edit the currently selected deck.

Create new deck

Creating Flashcards

Press o to view the cards in a deck. Press n to create a new card.

Create new flashcard

Commands

Usage:
  goki                      - tui mode
  goki list                 - view deck index
  goki review <deck index>  - review deck from cli
		
Import:
  opt:                      - optional flags
    -n "deck name"          - assigned deck name to imported cards
    -t                      - assigns tab sep (default sep=',')

  goki opt < deck.txt       - import deck in using stdin

Generate:
  goki --gpt "my prompt"    - generate a deck from a text prompt
  goki --gpt < my_notes.txt - generate a deck from text or markdown files

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