/anki_decks

Questions and answers for Anki spaced repetition software decks. Created for the content of the School of Code bootcamp.

MIT LicenseMIT

anki_decks

Full Stack Anki Flashcards


Download the Anki deck here

Neo learning

Questions and answers for Anki spaced repetition software decks. Created for the content of the School of Code bootcamp.


Please feel free to submit pull requests, which will be added to the decks on the Anki Web website. This will download all of the decks, you will be able to choose between topics once it's installed on your system.

If you have previously downloaded the decks and added them to Anki, to get updates and new decks, you will need to manually download and re-add them.

Note: These questions and answers were created in autumn 2023 and information may become outdated in the future.


Anki is spaced repetition software that optimises learning by showing you flashcards, asking you to rate how difficult you found answering it, and then showing you cards that you found more difficult more often.

It is available to use on their web app, desktop software or via their iOS app.

The benefit of using their mobile app is that it allows one to study whilst on the move, whilst fulfilling other commitments or during downtime such as waiting in a queue.

"Every minute of your life which passes resculpts, often imperceptibly, the way your neurons are wired together. Anki is a tool which allows you to get certain neurons to fire together at an interval which science has loosely deemed 'optimal' for keeping them wired together." - Reddit guy

'The competitive nature of plasticity affects us all. There is an endless war of nerves going on inside each of our brains. If we stop exercising our mental skills, we do not just forget them: the brain map space for those skills is turned over to the skills we practice instead. If you ever ask yourself, “How often must I practice French, or guitar, or math to keep on top of it?” you are asking a question about competitive plasticity. You are asking how frequently you must practice one activity to make sure its brain map space is not lost to another.' - The Brain That Changes Itself, Norman Doidge.