tag:mentalfaculty.tenderapp.com,2010-10-19:/discussions/questions/5011-due-notesThe Mental Faculty: Discussion 2018-10-19T02:24:14Ztag:mentalfaculty.tenderapp.com,2010-10-19:Comment/296392642013-10-29T07:58:50Z2013-10-29T07:58:50ZDue Notes<div><p>Hi Wayne,</p>
<p>The way it works with scheduling of notes that are not due is a
little complicated. In general, studying a note that is not due
will not affect its schedule. That makes sense, because otherwise
you would be breaking the schedule, and it may not be
effective.</p>
<p>However, if you study a note that could be due, but is not due
to limits you set, then its schedule will be updated as if it were
already due. That is because the note is eligible to be due, but
some limit is preventing it from actually becoming due. This should
only be a factor if you are limiting the number of notes that can
be due in each stack.</p>
<p>Study records are created each time you study a note, regardless
of the schedule. These records are used to update your expected
retention score. When you change schedule, the new schedule starts
from the beginning, ignoring any previous study sessions. In other
words, all study sessions affect your retention score, but for
scheduling, only the relevant sessions are included.</p>
<p>At the moment we don't have stack wide stats. The best you can
do is look at the statistics graphs while you are studying that
stack. You don't see any Leitner scores, but it should give you an
idea of your expected average retention time. We would like to add
stack statistics in a future update.</p>
<p>Kind regards,<br>
Drew</p></div>drewmccormacktag:mentalfaculty.tenderapp.com,2010-10-19:Comment/296392642013-10-31T04:00:24Z2013-10-31T04:00:24ZDue Notes<div><p>Drew,</p>
<p>Thanks for the thorough reply. That helps me in better
understanding how I should be studying.</p>
<p>Wayne.</p></div>Wayne Furrie