I'm curious whether it's possible to turn a resource, like a math textbook, into flashcards in such a way that you memorize the flashcards themselves, enabling a purely mental flashcard review.
Somewhat related to this: to have Anki flashcards or some higher-level flashcard representation (which could yield an Anki deck, e.g. using a genanki workflow) , more consistently extracted from textbooks and made available would make me very happy; I've wished for a reality in which, on data or code sharing platforms (e.g. Zenodo or GitHub), the majority of textbook authors or researchers shared their .tex files (for others to use, possibly with Anki) or any Anki cards associated with their work.
Benefits of spaced repetition systems (Anki) go beyond saving time looking up facts.
Each card will take time to practice. Thinking about all that accumulated time discouraged me, at first. The costs are lower than they appear at first.
I'm curious whether it's possible to turn a resource, like a math textbook, into flashcards in such a way that you memorize the flashcards themselves, enabling a purely mental flashcard review. Notably, I find that as a card matures, I become so confident that I got the answer correct that I no longer need to check. This supports my belief that purely mental flashcard review is possible.