643ec35449
When a user renames or deletes a field, Anki tries to go through the user's templates to substitute occurrences of that field name with its new name or remove the field. However, if the user has multiple Mustache placeholders on a single line, this does not work as intended because the leading (.*) capture group grabs the text in-between the two (or more) Mustache placeholders. Examples: {{#Flag}} ... {{/Flag}}{{^Flag}} ... {{/Flag}} or {{Front}} {{#Flag}}...{{/Flag}} or {{Front}} Hello. {{Victim}} |
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anki | ||
aqt | ||
designer | ||
oldanki | ||
tests | ||
thirdparty | ||
tools | ||
.gitignore | ||
anki.1 | ||
anki.bat | ||
anki.desktop | ||
anki.png | ||
anki.xml | ||
anki.xpm | ||
LICENSE | ||
LICENSE.logo | ||
Makefile | ||
README | ||
README.development | ||
runanki |
Anki ------------------------------------- Prerequisites --------------- To install the prerequisites on Ubuntu/Debian, please use the following command: sudo apt-get install python-qt4 mplayer lame libportaudio2 python-sqlalchemy If you're on another distribution the packages may be named differently, so please consult your package manager. Your Python version will need to be 2.6 or 2.7 (not 3+), and both Qt and PyQt need to be 4.7 or later. Installation & Running ------------------------ Anki does not need installing, and can be run from the directory it is extracted to. If you extracted it to ~/anki-2.0 for example, you can run Anki by simply typing ~/anki-2.0/runanki in a terminal. If you'd like to install it system wide, change to the folder you extracted it to, and run 'sudo make install'. If you need to uninstall Anki in the future, you can do so by typing 'sudo make uninstall'. More information ----------------- For more information and the latest version, please see the website at: http://ankisrs.net/