In preparation for cramming:
- add odid for storing old deck on a per-card basis
- rename edue to odue
- at the moment note.did still exists, but in the future we may ignore it and
use model.did instead
Since we rely on fixIntegrity() to garbage-collect tags and don't try to add
unused ones to the graves, after a check the tag counts will fall out of sync.
- don't send server graves graves back on the next sync
- make sure we update usns of models/tags/decks as well on upload
- don't die when updating decks after current deck deleted
- report counts when sanity check fails
- drop lrnCount; rename lrnRepCount to lrnCount
- on card fetch, decr count by card.left
- drop cardCounts(), rename repCounts() to just counts()
- fix lrn count bugs
Because JSON doesn't support 64 bit numbers, we need to either convert the 64
bit numbers to a string during transport, or store the ids as a string. At
base 91 a 64 bit number only takes an extra two bytes, and it means we can
dump DB results directly into JSON without having to apply any transformation.
Instead of having required and unique flags for every field, enforce both
requirements on the first field, and neither on the rest. This mirrors the
subject/body format people are used to in note-taking apps. The subject
defines the object being learnt, and the remaining fields represent properties
of that object.
In the past, duplicate checking served two purposes: it quickly notified the
user that they're entering the same fact twice, and it notified the user if
they'd accidentally mistyped a secondary field. The former behaviour is
important for avoiding wasted effort, and so it should be done in real time.
The latter behaviour is not essential however - a typo is not wasted effort,
and it could be fixed in a periodic 'find duplicates' function. Given that
some users ended up with sluggish decks due to the overhead a large number of
facts * a large number of unique fields caused, this seems like a change for
the better.
This also means Anki will let you add notes as long as as the first field has
been filled out. Again, this is not a big deal: Anki is still checking to make
sure one or more cards will be generated, and the user can easily add any
missing fields later.
As a bonus, this change simplifies field configuration somewhat. As the card
layout and field dialogs are a popular point of confusion, the more they can
be simplified, the better.