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A command line program to convert markdown files into anki decks.

Project description

markdown-anki-decks

PyPI PyPI - Python Version PyPI - License

Markdown anki decks is a simple program to convert markdown files into anki decks.

# The h1 tag is the deck title

## The h2 tags are the questions

The markdown content between h2 tags are the answers.

Markdown anki decks uses the question to uniquely identify the card. You can change the card contents without losing your progress on the card. Markdown anki decks can be reimported without creating duplicates.

Installation

Make sure you have a python version of 3.7 or greater installed.

pip install markdown-anki-decks

This will install the mdankideck cli tool.

Tutorial

Markdown anki decks converts all markdown files in an input directory to apkg files. The apkg files are stored in an output directory.

  1. Create the input directory mkdir input.

  2. Create the output directory mkdir output.

  3. Create a markdown file in the input directory.

    <!-- input/deck.md -->
    
    # Deck Title
    
    ## Card Title
    
    card contents.
    
    ## Second Card Title
    
    card contents 2.
    
  4. Run mdankideck input output to convert the markdown files in the input directory to apkg files in the output directory.

  5. Import apkg files as decks into anki.

Usage

mdankideck comes with built in documentation. Run mdankideck --help to see it.

Usage: mdankideck [OPTIONS] INPUT_DIR OUTPUT_DIR

Arguments:
  INPUT_DIR   The input directory. Contains markdown files which will be
              converted to anki decks.  [required]

  OUTPUT_DIR  The output directory. Anki .apkg files will be written here.
              [required]


Options:
  --sync                Whether or not to synchronize the output with anki
                        using anki connect.  [default: False]

  --prefix TEXT         Can be used to make your markdown decks part of a
                        single subdeck. Anki uses `::` to indicate sub decks.
                        `markdown-decks::` could be used to make all generated
                        decks part of a single root deck `markdown-decks`
                        [default: ]

  --delete              Whether to delete cards from anki during sync. If sync
                        is false this has no effect.  [default: False]

  --cloze               Whether to support cloze syntax  [default: False]
  --version             Show version information  [default: False]
  --install-completion  Install completion for the current shell.
  --show-completion     Show completion for the current shell, to copy it or
                        customize the installation.

  --help                Show this message and exit.

Syncing

Markdown anki decks can use AnkiConnect to sync the created decks immediately to anki. First you need to install AnkiConnect as an add on in Anki. Then you need to call mdankideck with the --sync flag. By default if you delete a question in markdown we do not delete the question in Anki during sync. However you can delete missing questions in Anki during sync by calling mdankideck with the --delete flag.

If you see an error message Unable to reach anki connect. Make sure anki is running and the Anki Connect addon is installed., make sure you have installed anki connect and that you are running anki.

# convert markdown file in the input directory to apkg files in the output
# directory and sync the decks to anki using anki connect
mdankideck input output --sync


# convert input to output with an empty deck prefix (default)
# and delete cards from anki if the question is deleted or changed in markdown
mdankideck input output --sync --delete

Subdecks

You can use the Deck title prefix option to make all your markdown decks part of a single subdeck. Anki automatically creates subdecks based on deck names.

Decks can contain other decks, which allows you to organize decks into a tree. Anki uses “::” to show different levels. A deck called “Chinese::Hanzi” refers to a “Hanzi” deck, which is part of a “Chinese” deck. If you select “Hanzi” then only the Hanzi cards will be shown; if you select “Chinese” then all Chinese cards, including Hanzi cards, will be shown. Source

I use a prefix md:: to store all my markdown decks in a subdeck called md.

# sync all cards to anki with a root deck `md`
mdankideck input output True "md::" True

Images

Markdown anki decks support images which are stored in the same folder as the markdown file they are referenced by.

![my-image](image.jpg) will work because it is in the same folder as the markdown file.

![my-image](./images/image.jpg) will not work because it is in a different folder than the markdown file.

All images must have unique filenames even if they are stored in different folders.

These are limitations of anki not Markdown anki decks.

Styling Cards

The cards are styled with minimal css markdown.css. Syntax highlighting is provided via pygments. The syntax highlighting uses the pygments default theme.

Clozes (experimental)

mdankideck supports close syntax in questions if you call mdankideck with the --cloze flag. Clozes can be specified in the question using the template {{c#::answer::hint}} where # is a number and answer and hint are words or multiple words. The hint is optional so you can also write {{c#::answer}}. Clozes with the same c# will be hidden together.

The following markdown would create two cloze cards.

## The alphabet starts with {{c1::a}} {{c2::b}} {{c1::a}}

The alphabet starts with [...] b [...]

and

The alphabet starts with a [...] c

The c1 clozes are blocked out together.

Custom Styling

You can add custom styling using yaml frontmatter. The css key takes a path to a css file as a string or an array of paths to multiple css files.

---
css: custom-styles.css
---
---
css: ["one.css", "two.css", "three.css", "four.css"]
---

The paths to the css files are assumed to be relative to the markdown file. Cards have the following html structure. During processing markdown anki decks wraps your answer in a section tag. So the answer will be <section>{{Answer}}</section>. This extra wrapping step is performed because answers can consist of multiple sibling html elements and we need to provide a single element to Anki.

<!-- the question card -->
<div class="card">
  <div class="question">{{Question}}</div>
</div>

<!-- the answer card -->
<div class="card">
  <div class="question">{{Question}}</div>
  <hr />
  <div class="answer">{{Answer}}</div>
</div>

You can style cards in general using the .card selector and you can style questions and answers using the .question and .answer selector.

/* apply red background to all cards */
.card {
  background: red;
}

Mathjax

Anki supports mathjax out of the box. However you need to be careful with how markdown escapes characters. The following code snippet will not render as mathjax when you convert it because markdown will assume you are trying to escape the parentheses and will render the text (\sqrt{x})

\(\sqrt{x}\)

You need to escape the backslashes by using double backslashes. The following snippet will work to render math using mathjax.

<!-- this will render inline math -->

\\(\sqrt{x}\\)

<!-- this will render block math -->

\\[\sqrt{x}\\]

Markdown Features

Most commonly used markdown features should work without any issues. If there is a Markdown feature you want to use and it is supported by one of the official extensions for python-markdown there is good chance it can be added to the project. Check out cli.py to see the list of currently enabled extensions. (Search for extensions=)

Multiline questions

You may want to render complex questions which span multiple lines. You can use the fact that any h2 element is assumed to be a question combined with the fact that the markdown converter supports embedding markdown in html if you use the special attribute markdown="block" on the html element. It's much easier to see with an example.

<h2 markdown="block">
- this question
- is actually
- a markdown list

You can even add math to your questions \\(\sqrt{2}\\)

</h2>

Additionally you may not want h2 styling for your multiline question. In that case you can add the data-question attribute to any tag to make it a question.

<div data-question markdown="block">

This is a question which does not have h2 formatting!

- it can contain nested markdown such as `code`

</div>

For more information see the md_in_html documentation

Limitations

Markdown anki decks makes some assumptions to enable syncing. Cards are uniquely identified by their deck name and question. If you change the deck name or the question you will lose the card history. All deck names must be unique. All questions in a single deck must be unique. Identical questions in separate decks are ok.

Design

The markdown files are parsed with python-markdown. The resulting html is then parsed with beautifulsoup. Finally the cards are created with genanki. The cli is implemented using typer and the program is packaged using poetry.

Contributing

Happy to discuss additional features if you open up an issue.

We use commitizen for commits. Run poetry run cz commit to make a commit.

Run poetry run mdankideck --prefix "test::" --sync --cloze testData/input testData/output to convert the test data into decks.

Run poetry run pygmentize -S default -f html -a .codehilite > ./markdown_anki_decks/styles/pygments.css to create a pygments stylesheet. Run poetry run pygmentize -S monokai -f html -a ".nightMode .codehilite" > ./markdown_anki_decks/styles/pygments-dark.css to create the dark mode stylesheet. The -S flag is used to specify the style. Run poetry run pygmentize -L style to list the styles pygmentize can use. Replace default with any of the styles to use a different style.

Currently use default for light mode and monokai for dark mode.

Releases

Run poetry run cz bump --check-consistency to update the changelog and create a tag.

Run poetry publish --build to publish the pack to pypi.

git push --tags && git push to update github.

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