- Daily limits are no longer inherited - each deck limits its own
cards, and the selected deck enforces a maximum limit.
- Fetching of review cards now uses a single query, and sorts in advance.
In collections with a large number of overdue cards and decks, this is
faster than iterating over each deck in turn.
- Include interday learning count in review count & review limit, and
allow them to be buried.
- Warn when parent review limit is lower than child deck in deck options.
- Cap the new card limit to the review limit.
- Add option to control whether new card fetching short-circuits.
Instead of using a separate undo queue, the code now defers checking for
newly-due learning cards until the answering stage, and logs the updated
cutoff time as an undoable change, so that any newly-due learning cards
won't appear instead of a new/review card that was just undone.
Queue redo now uses a similar approach to undo, instead of rebuilding the
queues.
The original rationale was avoiding a possible O(n) insertion if
the learning card was due outside the cutoff, but the increased code
complexity doesn't seem worth it, given that learning cards will
rarely grow above 1000.
Also added a currently-disabled test that demonstrates the current undo
handling behaviour is yielding incorrect counts; that will be reworked
in the next commit, and this change will make that easier.
- split new card fetch order and subsequent sort order; use latter
when building queues
- default to spacing siblings when burying is off, with options to
show each sibling in turn, and shuffle the fetched cards
The bury new/review flags are now pulled from each card's home deck,
instead of using a global setting that had not been hooked up. This
unfortunately means we need to fetch the map of all decks up front, as
we need to be able to look up a deck configuration for cards that are
in filtered decks.
Fixes a "card was modified" error caused by cards being buried during
review, when they weren't removed up-front.
Avoids duplicate work, and is a step towards allowing the next
states to be modified by third-party code.
Also:
- fixed incorrect underlined count, due to reviews being labeled as
learning cards
- fixed reviewer not refreshing when undoing a test review, by splitting
up backend queue rebuilding from frontend reviewer refresh
- moved answering into a CollectionOp
Allows add-on authors to define their own label for a group of undoable
operations. For example:
def mark_and_bury(
*,
parent: QWidget,
card_id: CardId,
) -> CollectionOp[OpChanges]:
def op(col: Collection) -> OpChanges:
target = col.add_custom_undo_entry("Mark and Bury")
col.sched.bury_cards([card_id])
card = col.get_card(card_id)
col.tags.bulk_add(note_ids=[card.nid], tags="marked")
return col.merge_undo_entries(target)
return CollectionOp(parent, op)
The .add_custom_undo_entry() is for adding your own custom actions.
When extending a standard Anki action, instead store `target =
col.undo_status().last_step` after executing the standard operation.
This started out as a bigger refactor that required a separate
.commit_undoable() call to be run after each operation, instead of
having each operation return changes directly. But that proved to be
somewhat cumbersome in unit tests, and ran the risk of unexpected
behaviour if the caller invoked an operation without remembering to
finalize it.
- backend now updates current notetype as part of addition
- frontend no longer implicitly adds, so we can assign a new name and
add in a single operation
- tokio 1.0
- updated reqwest, thanks to Rumo
- other minor dep updates
the reqwest build file has been split into two, as it was awkward
to manually update the combined file, and the platform gate is now
on the target in rslib/
The deck name must be constructed by calling associated functions of
NativeDeckName, unless the name is guaranteed to be valid machine
name (like "Default").
NativeDeckName exposes methods to mutate the deck name and return
the human name.
The storage routines take &strs, but those should be slices of
NativeDeckNames to ensure machine form and normalization.
Instead, fetch the config order on the frontend and pass a builtin
variant into the backend.
That makes the following unnecessary:
* Resolving the config sort in search/mod.rs
* Deserializing the Column enum
* Config accessors for the sort columns
* Remove duplicate backend columns
* Remove duplicate column routines
* Move columns on frontend from state to model
* Generate available columns from Colum enum
* Add second column label for notes mode