Rather than use a combination of id lookups on the groups table and a group
configuration cache in the scheduler, I've moved the groups and group config
into json objects on the deck table. This results in a net saving of code and
saves one or more DB lookups on each card answer, in exchange for a small
increase in deck load/save work.
I did a quick survey of AnkiWeb, and the vast majority of decks use less than
100 tags, and it's safe to assume groups will follow a similar pattern.
All groups and group configs except the default one will use integer
timestamps now, to simplify merging when syncing and importing.
defaultGroup() has been removed in favour of keeping the models up to date
(not yet done).
- cards in final review are first reset as rev cards so that type==queue and
they can be restored correctly
- new cards in learning have type set to 1 so they too can be restored
correctly
instead of completely resetting a card like we did in resetCards() in the
past, forgetCards() just puts the card back in the new queue and leaves the
factor and revlog alone. If users want to complete reset a card, they'll need to
export it.
- use negative numbers to denote second intervals
- record the rev ivl when leaving lrn queue
- improve revlog upgrade
- don't truncate precision when recording time taken
reps should now be equal to the number of entries in the revlog, and only
exists so that we can order by review count in the browser efficiently
streak is no longer necessary as we have a learn queue now
originally the plan was to get the user to "forget learning cards" or "remove
final drill" when switching between categories, but that's cumbersome and not
intuitive
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.