A quick guide to installing Anki, importing flashcard decks, and studying effectively.
What is Anki?
Anki is a free flashcard app that uses spaced repetition — it shows you cards just before you're likely to forget them. This is one of the most effective revision techniques backed by research.
You can use it on your computer, phone, or both. Your progress syncs across devices.
In Anki on your computer, click the Sync button (circular arrow icon) and sign in
On your phone, open the app settings and sign in with the same account
Tap Sync on each device to keep everything up to date
Step 4: Study
Open Anki and tap on a deck
Tap Study Now
Read the question and try to answer in your head
Tap Show Answer to check
Rate how well you knew it:
Button
When to use it
Again
You didn't know it — you'll see it again soon
Hard
You struggled but got there eventually
Good
You knew it with some effort
Easy
You knew it instantly
Anki schedules cards based on your ratings. Difficult cards appear more often; easy ones are spaced further apart.
Tips for Effective Studying
Study every day — even 10 minutes is effective. Consistency beats long sessions.
Don't skip days — reviews pile up quickly and become overwhelming.
Be honest — pressing "Again" isn't failure; it's how the system learns what you need.
Adjust new cards per day — click the gear icon next to a deck name to change how many new cards you see each day. Start with 10-15 if 20 feels too many.
Review before bed — research shows sleep helps consolidate what you've just studied.
Troubleshooting
"I can't open the .apkg file" — Make sure Anki is installed first, then try double-clicking the file or use File → Import from within Anki.
"The file won't download" — Try a different browser, or right-click the download link and choose "Save link as..."
"I only want to use my phone" — That works fine. Download the .apkg file directly on your phone and import it in the app.
"Cards aren't syncing" — Make sure you tap Sync on both devices and are signed in with the same AnkiWeb account.