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<div align="center"> <img src="https://avatars.githubusercontent.com/u/96821265?s=200&v=4" height="100" alt="Open Spaced Repetition logo"/> </div> <div align="center">Py-FSRS
</div> <div align="center"> <em>🧠🔄 Build your own Spaced Repetition System in Python 🧠🔄 </em> </div> <br /> <div align="center" style="text-decoration: none;"> <a href="https://pypi.org/project/fsrs/"><img src="https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/fsrs"></a> <a href="https://github.com/open-spaced-repetition/py-fsrs/blob/main/LICENSE" style="text-decoration: none;"><img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/License-MIT-brightgreen.svg"></a> <a href="https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff"><img src="https://img.shields.io/endpoint?url=https://raw.githubusercontent.com/astral-sh/ruff/main/assets/badge/v2.json"></a> </div> <br />Py-FSRS is a python package that allows developers to easily create their own spaced repetition system using the <a href="https://github.com/open-spaced-repetition/free-spaced-repetition-scheduler">Free Spaced Repetition Scheduler algorithm</a>.
Installation
You can install the fsrs
python package from PyPI using pip:
pip install fsrs
Quickstart
Import and initialize the FSRS scheduler
from fsrs import Scheduler, Card, Rating, ReviewLog
scheduler = Scheduler()
Create a new Card object
# note: all new cards are 'due' immediately upon creation
card = Card()
Choose a rating and review the card with the scheduler
# Rating.Again (==1) forgot the card
# Rating.Hard (==2) remembered the card with serious difficulty
# Rating.Good (==3) remembered the card after a hesitation
# Rating.Easy (==4) remembered the card easily
rating = Rating.Good
card, review_log = scheduler.review_card(card, rating)
print(f"Card rated {review_log.rating} at {review_log.review_datetime}")
# > Card rated 3 at 2024-11-30 17:46:58.856497+00:00
See when the card is due next
from datetime import datetime, timezone
due = card.due
# how much time between when the card is due and now
time_delta = due - datetime.now(timezone.utc)
print(f"Card due on {due}")
print(f"Card due in {time_delta.seconds} seconds")
# > Card due on 2024-11-30 18:42:36.070712+00:00
# > Card due in 599 seconds
Usage
Custom parameters
You can initialize the FSRS scheduler with your own custom parameters.
from datetime import timedelta
# note: the following arguments are also the defaults
scheduler = Scheduler(
parameters = (
0.40255,
1.18385,
3.173,
15.69105,
7.1949,
0.5345,
1.4604,
0.0046,
1.54575,
0.1192,
1.01925,
1.9395,
0.11,
0.29605,
2.2698,
0.2315,
2.9898,
0.51655,
0.6621,
),
desired_retention = 0.9,
learning_steps = (timedelta(minutes=1), timedelta(minutes=10)),
relearning_steps = (timedelta(minutes=10),),
maximum_interval = 36500,
enable_fuzzing = True
)
Explanation of parameters
parameters
are a set of 19 model weights that affect how the FSRS scheduler will schedule future reviews. If you're not familiar with optimizing FSRS, it is best not to modify these default values.
desired_retention
is a value between 0 and 1 that sets the desired minimum retention rate for cards when scheduled with the scheduler. For example, with the default value of desired_retention=0.9
, a card will be scheduled at a time in the future when the predicted probability of the user correctly recalling that card falls to 90%. A higher desired_retention
rate will lead to more reviews and a lower rate will lead to fewer reviews.
learning_steps
are custom time intervals that schedule new cards in the Learning state. By default, cards in the Learning state have short intervals of 1 minute then 10 minutes. You can also disable learning_steps
with Scheduler(learning_steps=())
relearning_steps
are analogous to learning_steps
except they apply to cards in the Relearning state. Cards transition to the Relearning state if they were previously in the Review state, then were rated Again - this is also known as a 'lapse'. If you specify Scheduler(relearning_steps=())
, cards in the Review state, when lapsed, will not move to the Relearning state, but instead stay in the Review state.
maximum_interval
sets the cap for the maximum days into the future the scheduler is capable of scheduling cards. For example, if you never want the scheduler to schedule a card more than one year into the future, you'd set Scheduler(maximum_interval=365)
.
enable_fuzzing
, if set to True, will apply a small amount of random 'fuzz' to calculated intervals. For example, a card that would've been due in 50 days, after fuzzing, might be due in 49, or 51 days.
Timezone
Py-FSRS uses UTC only.
You can still specify custom datetimes, but they must use the UTC timezone.
Retrievability
You can calculate the current probability of correctly recalling a card (its 'retrievability') with
retrievability = card.get_retrievability()
print(f"There is a {retrievability} probability that this card is remembered.")
# > There is a 0.94 probability that this card is remembered.
Serialization
Scheduler
, Card
and ReviewLog
objects are all JSON-serializable via their to_dict
and from_dict
methods for easy database storage:
# serialize before storage
scheduler_dict = scheduler.to_dict()
card_dict = card.to_dict()
review_log_dict = review_log.to_dict()
# deserialize from dict
new_scheduler = Scheduler.from_dict(scheduler_dict)
new_card = Card.from_dict(card_dict)
new_review_log = ReviewLog.from_dict(review_log_dict)
Reference
Card objects have one of three possible states
State.Learning # (==1) new card being studied for the first time
State.Review # (==2) card that has "graduated" from the Learning state
State.Relearning # (==3) card that has "lapsed" from the Review state
There are four possible ratings when reviewing a card object:
Rating.Again # (==1) forgot the card
Rating.Hard # (==2) remembered the card with serious difficulty
Rating.Good # (==3) remembered the card after a hesitation
Rating.Easy # (==4) remembered the card easily
Other FSRS implementations
You can find various other FSRS implementations and projects here.
Other SRS python packages
The following spaced repetition schedulers are also available as python packages:
Contribute
Checkout CONTRIBUTING to help improve Py-FSRS!