I want to use the capture
module of org-mode
to create a data base of new words that I want to learn, and then use the drill
module to learn them (flash cards style).
In my org-capture-templates
I added the following:
("v" "Vocabulary" entry
(file+headline (concat org-directory "/vocab.org")
"Vocabulary")
"* Word :drill:\n%^ \n** Answer \n%^")
This is a rather naive template which I borrowed from here. It works fine but it is too limited. Unfortunately I'm rather new to elisp
and I don't know how to improve it.
I think the above template has to be improved in the following there aspects:
Headline Currently the first input string is the (new) word and the headline is fixed. How can the headline be the same (input) word? I think that the following result is desirable:
* Vocabulary
** Foo :drill:
Foo
*** Answer
What is foo
Actually an even better way would be to have 3 input strings.
- The new word (for example
foo
) which will be the headline. - If the second is empty, then it gets the same string as (1). Otherwise, concatenates the string to the one from (1). E.g. having as second input
bar
would yieldfoo bar
. This will be the content of the entry. - The word's definition which should come in the
answer
sub-headline.
Duplications (see again this) If at some later point I try to capture foo
again, I would like to know it, and be directed to edit the already existing entry - skipping all the inputs.
Sorting After capturing I think it would be nice to sort the list of words. This should not be too hard given that the headline of each entry is the word itself. In this case one can probably use the org-sort-entries
function.
I know this is a rather big questions but I also think that if it can be solved here it will be of great use to many users.
Edits:
Using @juan_g suggestions, I improved my template and now it is:
("v" "Vocabulary" entry
(file+headline (concat org-directory "/vocab.org")
"Vocabulary")
"* %^{The word} :drill:\n %t\n %^{Extended word (may be empty)} \n** Answer \n%^{The definition}")
I didn't manage to set the default value of the second input to be the 1st one. I tried something like %^{Extended word (may be empty)|%\1}
but it returns ^A
which is not helpful.
In any case, this improved version seems to be already usable.