When a user has learning steps that extend past the daily cutoff, we end up
counting them all instead of only the ones that would be done today. In order
to avoid this without expensive calculations or db schema changes, we
calculate the number of steps until the daily cutoff and pack it into the left
column, as totalLeft + leftToday*1000.
- 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
Rather than showing the user how many cards are in the learning queue, we want
to be able to show them the number of reps they have to do to clear the queue,
so they can better estimate the required time. Before we were counting up with
the grade column, but this means we can't quickly sum up the number of reps
left. So we invert it, and count down instead.
I also dropped the 'first time bonus' for now. If there's enough demand for
it, it can be added back by using the flags column, instead of a dedicated
cycles column.
see the following for background discussion:
http://groups.google.com/group/ankisrs-users/browse_thread/thread/4db5e82f7dff74fb
- change sched index to the more efficient gid, queue, due
- drop the dynamic index support. as there's no no q/a cache anymore, it's
cheap enough to hit the cards table directly, and we can't use the index in
its new form.
- drop order by clauses (see todo)
- ensure there's always an active group. if users want to study all groups at
once, they need to create a top level group. we do this because otherwise
the 'top level group' that's active when everything is selected is not
clear.
to do:
- new cards will appear in gid order, but the gid numbers don't reflect
alphabetical sorting. we need to change the scheduling code so that it steps
through each group in turn
- likewise for the learn queue
As per the forum thread, the current due counts are really demotivating when
there's a backlog of cards. In attempt to solve this, I'm trying out a new
behaviour as the default: instead of reporting all the due cards including the
backlog, the status bar will show an increasing count of cards studied that
day. Theoretically this should allow users to focus on what they've done
rather than what they have to do. The old behaviour is still there as an option.
As discussed on the forums, moving to a single collection requires moving some
deck-level configuration into groups so users can have different settings like
new cards/day for each top level item.
Also:
- store id in groups
- add mod time to gconf updates
- move the limiting code that's not specific to scheduling into groups.py
- store the current model id per top level group
Like the previous change, models have been moved from a separate DB table to
an entry in the deck. We need them for many operations including reviewing,
and it's easier to keep them in memory than half on disk with a cache that
gets cleared every time we .reset(). This means they are easily serialized as
well - previously they were part Python and part JSON, which made access
confusing.
Because the data is all pulled from JSON now, the instance methods have been
moved to the model registry. Eg:
model.addField(...) -> deck.models.addField(model, ...).
- IDs are now timestamped as with groups et al.
- The data field for plugins was also removed. Config info can be added to
deck.conf; larger data should be stored externally.
- Upgrading needs to be updated for the new model structure.
- HexifyID() now accepts strings as well, as our IDs get converted to strings
in the serialization process.
The undo code was using triggers and a temporary table to write out all changed rows before making a change. This made for powerful undo/redo support, but had some problems:
- creating the tables and triggers wasn't cheap, especially on mobile devices
- likewise, every data modification required writing into two separate databases, almost doubling the amount of writes required
- it was possible to leave the DB in an inconsistent state if an undoable operation is followed by a non-undoable operation that references the undoable operation, and the user then rolls back the undoable operation.
To address these issues, we simplify undo by integrating it with the autosave changes:
- .save() can be passed a name to mark a rollback point. If the user undoes the change, any changes since the last save are lost
- autosaves happen every 5 minutes, and are pushed back on a .save(), so the maximum work a user can lose is 5 minutes.
- reviews are handled separately, so we can let the user undo multiple reviews at once
- if necessary, special cases could be added for other operations like marking
This means that if a user does two damaging operations in a row they won't be able to restore the first one, but such an event is both unlikely, and is also covered by the backups made each time a deck is opened.