Glossary
Deck tagging strategy
Tags should reflect how you search and filter—not every possible metadata field. Start simple and tighten as the deck grows.
Definition
Tags should reflect how you search and filter—not every possible metadata field. Start simple and tighten as the deck grows. This glossary note keeps claims grounded: extraction can speed up drafting, but review stays your quality gate for Thai study pages.
Why it matters for language learners
Decks compound over months. Small mistakes in wording, readings, or duplicates become expensive when spaced repetition amplifies them. A clear definition helps you decide what to automate and what to inspect.
Common mistakes
- Treating OCR output as “finished” instead of draft text to verify.
- Mixing too many intents into one card so reviews feel vague.
- Skipping tags and structure, then struggling to export or filter later.
How cramblr fits this concept
cramblr is built around import, review, and—when enabled—export so learners can keep messy real-world sources while still approving only trustworthy cards.
If your end state is Anki, pair review discipline with a clean APKG export rather than retyping everything by hand.
Related reading
- Pillar: Import textbook photos into draft flashcards
- Next in lane: Continue this lane: Cloze vs basic card formats
- Cross-template A: How-to deep dive: Batch-import chapters without chaos
- Cross-template B: Real scenario: Thai vocab extraction from annotated handouts
Keep exploring the workflow
Thai flashcards
See how messy Thai source material turns into reviewed draft cards, with the same workflow informing the broader launch.
Import workflow
Understand the capture and extraction path from photos to reviewed cards for Thai study material.
Anki export
See how approved cards move cleanly into an APKG-based Anki workflow.
Ready to try the workflow?
Upload your own Thai study pages, review the extracted cards, and export only the material you want to keep.