What do you want now? (Request extensions here)

YES, pitch accent indicators would be extremely useful!

1 Like

Does anyone remember the “I mistyped” button? I found that very helpful because it’s very frustrating to send a kanji all the way back down to apprentice after a misstype!

Tokiprodnuk said... Does anyone remember the "I mistyped" button? I found that very helpful because it's very frustrating to send a kanji all the way back down to apprentice after a misstype!
 There's a list of most userscripts here: /t/The-New-And-Improved-List-Of-API-and-Third-Party-Apps/7694/1

And I presume you're looking for the ignore button: https://greasyfork.org/en/scripts/23696-wanikani-override

Hey guys, not sure if a script like this already exists but I looked through the current APIs and did a web search and wasn’t able to find it. Sorry if this has already been made/requested.

I was wondering if it would be possible to sort reviews by their burn level? I’ve been inactive for a long time, and I have a lot of reviews built up. I thought it would help me catch up if I could get the enlightened/master/etc words burned first so that it would reduce the number of reviews I do each day. 

Is it possible to get a userscript that removes radicals from reviews? 
They’re the biggest waste of time IMO. 

Hi

I have two types of mistakes during kanji reviews:
1/ I just forgot the reading/meaning
2/ I mislead with another kanji because of the kanji shape

Type-2 error is pretty annoying, and when it happens (quite often with some specific kanjis), I have to dig in the wanikani kanji library to find out what was the f*** kanji I misled with ! Usually, it is often the same.

What would be great is a addon that shows me, when I answer wrong to a kanji review, the other kanji I use to mislead with. In order for me to do a quick review of all the set of kanji I often get wrong with it…

I suppose it needs to access some kind of memory of all the mistakes I’ve done with a specific kanji, and what were the usual error I do… ?

veleskola said... Is it possible to get a userscript that removes radicals from reviews? 
They're the biggest waste of time IMO. 
Short Answer: I do not know of one that already exists.

Long Answer:
The general consensus I see around here is that if they are a "waste of time" then you probably fall into 1 of 2 categories.
1) They are so simple it doesn't even take a thought.
2) They are too difficult /  abstract, and there is no point in them

If you fall into category 1, then just answer them. 20 radicals at 3 seconds each is a minute of your time. I get like 5-10 radicals a day that pop up. Really... its trivial to just answer them.

If you fall into category 2, then perhaps you should first learn WHY radicals can be useful. If you can understand where Koichi is coming from... you might be willing to push past the initial absurdity of it all. (They really do turn out to be useful)

If for whatever reason you still want to skip them, the work around I have seen is to just give them all a synonym like "asdf" so you can just blast through when you see something blue pop up. (It's not the same as skipping them... but  it does drop it down to 1 second per radical instead of 2-3)
Shimizoki said...
veleskola said... Is it possible to get a userscript that removes radicals from reviews? 
They're the biggest waste of time IMO. 
Short Answer: I do not know of one that already exists.

Long Answer:
The general consensus I see around here is that if they are a "waste of time" then you probably fall into 1 of 2 categories.
1) They are so simple it doesn't even take a thought.
2) They are too difficult /  abstract, and there is no point in them

If you fall into category 1, then just answer them. 20 radicals at 3 seconds each is a minute of your time. I get like 5-10 radicals a day that pop up. Really... its trivial to just answer them.

If you fall into category 2, then perhaps you should first learn WHY radicals can be useful. If you can understand where Koichi is coming from... you might be willing to push past the initial absurdity of it all. (They really do turn out to be useful)

If for whatever reason you still want to skip them, the work around I have seen is to just give them all a synonym like "asdf" so you can just blast through when you see something blue pop up. (It's not the same as skipping them... but  it does drop it down to 1 second per radical instead of 2-3)
 It's more that I already learned radicals in the past. I can easily dissect any kanji. My problem is now WK expects me to memorise all the silly names they've given them which is just a waste time.
I get that it ties in with the mnemonics but those also don't help me. 
But I will try that suggestion, thanks. 
yume1 said... Hey guys, not sure if a script like this already exists but I looked through the current APIs and did a web search and wasn't able to find it. Sorry if this has already been made/requested.

I was wondering if it would be possible to sort reviews by their burn level? I've been inactive for a long time, and I have a lot of reviews built up. I thought it would help me catch up if I could get the enlightened/master/etc words burned first so that it would reduce the number of reviews I do each day. 
Sorry, didn't see this twelve days ago.

You could use this script to sort your reviews by descending SRS level: https://greasyfork.org/en/scripts/23503-wanikani-review-asc-desc-srs-order-radical-kanji-vocab 

So you'll get enlightened items first, then master, etc.

Ascending order is also possible.
hurtut said... Hi

I have two types of mistakes during kanji reviews:
1/ I just forgot the reading/meaning
2/ I mislead with another kanji because of the kanji shape

Type-2 error is pretty annoying, and when it happens (quite often with some specific kanjis), I have to dig in the wanikani kanji library to find out what was the f*** kanji I misled with ! Usually, it is often the same.

What would be great is a addon that shows me, when I answer wrong to a kanji review, the other kanji I use to mislead with. In order for me to do a quick review of all the set of kanji I often get wrong with it...

I suppose it needs to access some kind of memory of all the mistakes I've done with a specific kanji, and what were the usual error I do... ?
 That's indeed a very good idea. I also had it a few weeks ago! Would really help in de-learning those wrong associations!
veleskola said... Is it possible to get a userscript that removes radicals from reviews? 
They're the biggest waste of time IMO. 
 In fact, there are a couple of userscript solutions that I've tried.

Anki Mode https://greasyfork.org/en/scripts/15950-wanikani-anki-mode
Turn on Anki Mode to easily insert the correct answer with spacebar, then mark as correct with '1' or wrong with '2.' Can be used in conjunction with previously mentioned reorder userscript, to group all the radicals together. This is what I do. Then you can turn off for kanji and vocab.

WaniKani Just The Vocab (Skip Radicals and Kanji) https://greasyfork.org/en/scripts/24615-wanikani-just-the-vocab-skip-radicals-and-kanji
Automatically answers all radical and kanji, though you can turn off the kanji by setting it false by editing the userscript. I've had problems with it messing up remaining review count, maybe conflicting with other userscripts, but still an option.

I wonder if there is a script for all the new items learned in say past couple of days? I love the current review feature, but don’t want to see all the items, just the new ones.

Would be much obliged and thankful.

Is there a script that can show stats about the word? As you can see on Jisho.org, for example - you can see the JLPT level, in which grade is it taught in Japan (even though I don’t think it’s as important), and how common the word is (there’s a list I remember I saw online, some time ago, and on Jisho there’s a “common word” mark (I remember there was a button that said if the word is within the Top 5k (?) most used word in newspapers, too.

Slightly different, but on Jisho you can see collocations of the word, it would be great if someone could word out a way to make it visible\linkable from WaniKani too. 

I have a script on my old laptop that would auto-show the lesson info if I answered wrong.
I can’t find it now, can anyone help me find it?

Molans said... I have a script on my old laptop that would auto-show the lesson info if I answered wrong.
I can't find it now, can anyone help me find it?
 Look here: /t/The-New-And-Improved-List-Of-API-and-Third-Party-Apps/7694/1

Are there any scripts to lock up the descriptions unless you enter it wrong or get both the reading and the meaning correct. I tend to peek a little bit too much that it’s become a habit.

KSamo said... I wonder if there is a script for all the new items learned in say past couple of days? I love the current review feature, but don't want to see all the items, just the new ones.

Would be much obliged and thankful
 Try this /t/Userscript-Dashboard-Progress-Plus/8309/1 plus this /t/Userscript-Vocabulary-for-Dashboard-Panel-115/15905/1


Probably already been listed but the ability to have single word kanji that are vocabulary - say “we are looking for the other reading” instead of marking as wrong. Basically, what it already does when it is in the Kanji phase.

for example, as a kanji if I put “otoko”/“dan” in for 男 , but the Kanji is looking for the other reading, the text box would jiggle and say “that is the on reading, were looking for kin reading” (or vice versa). It does this already for kanji, but not at the vocabulary level. If I know both readings, I don’t care if I can identify if it is the on or kun reading.

hallus said... Probably already been listed but the ability to have single word kanji that are vocabulary - say "we are looking for the other reading" instead of marking as wrong. Basically, what it already does when it is in the Kanji phase.

for example, as a kanji if I put "otoko"/"dan" in for 男 , but the Kanji is looking for the other reading, the text box would jiggle and say "that is the on reading, were looking for kin reading" (or vice versa). It does this already for kanji, but not at the vocabulary level. If I know both readings, I don't care if I can identify if it is the on or kun reading.
 No, because that would be wrong. Words don't have readings. You get them right or wrong. Ultimately it won't matter if you know both readings and which one is the on or kun reading, because if you wanna say 'man' you better say おとこ. What you're proposing is an easy way out and will probably hurt your learning.

I would like a script that allows me to test myself on critical condition items, by revealing the reading and meaning when I hover.