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![]() Previously cloze deletions were handled by copying the contents of one field into another and applying transforms to it. This had a number of problems: - after you add a card, you can't undo the cloze deletion - if you spot a mistake, you have to edit it twice (or more if you have more than one cloze for a sentence) - making multiple clozes requires copying & pasting the sentence multiple times - this also lead to much bigger decks if the sentences being cloze-deleted are large - related clozes can't be spaced apart as siblings To address these issues, we introduce the idea of cloze tags in the card template and fields. If the template has the text: {{cloze:1:field}} And a field has the following contents: {{c1::hello}} Then the template will automatically replace that part of the text with either occluded text, or a highlighted answer. All other clozes in the field are displayed normally. At the same time, we add support for text: into the template library, instead of manually creating text: fields in the dict for every field. Finally, add a forecast routine to get the due counts for the next week, which is used in the GUI. |
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.. | ||
__init__.py | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.anki | ||
README.rst | ||
template.py | ||
view.py |
======== Pystache ======== Inspired by ctemplate_ and et_, Mustache_ is a framework-agnostic way to render logic-free views. As ctemplates says, "It emphasizes separating logic from presentation: it is impossible to embed application logic in this template language." Pystache is a Python implementation of Mustache. Pystache requires Python 2.6. Documentation ============= The different Mustache tags are documented at `mustache(5)`_. Install It ========== :: pip install pystache Use It ====== :: >>> import pystache >>> pystache.render('Hi {{person}}!', {'person': 'Mom'}) 'Hi Mom!' You can also create dedicated view classes to hold your view logic. Here's your simple.py:: import pystache class Simple(pystache.View): def thing(self): return "pizza" Then your template, simple.mustache:: Hi {{thing}}! Pull it together:: >>> Simple().render() 'Hi pizza!' Test It ======= nose_ works great! :: pip install nose cd pystache nosetests Author ====== :: context = { 'author': 'Chris Wanstrath', 'email': 'chris@ozmm.org' } pystache.render("{{author}} :: {{email}}", context) .. _ctemplate: http://code.google.com/p/google-ctemplate/ .. _et: http://www.ivan.fomichev.name/2008/05/erlang-template-engine-prototype.html .. _Mustache: http://defunkt.github.com/mustache/ .. _mustache(5): http://defunkt.github.com/mustache/mustache.5.html .. _nose: http://somethingaboutorange.com/mrl/projects/nose/0.11.1/testing.html