JLDrill - Japanese Language Drill program

JLDrill is a program for helping people drill aspects of the Japanese language using spaced repetition.

Features

  • spaced repetition

  • a dictionary cross reference tool

  • pop-up kanji reference (inspired by rikaichan for Firefox)

  • ability to import EDICT format files (EUC or UTF8 encoded) as a drill

  • The Tanaka corpus example sentences can be shown for vocabulary

  • A popup dictionary lookup tool with deinflection (again inspired by rikaichan for Firefox)

Current drills include:

  • a kana drill

  • JLPT vocabulary drills (These are the old 1, 2, 3, 4 lists NOT the new N1, N2, N3, N4, N5 lists)

User Documentation

Complete user documentation including installation instructions for GNU/Linux and Windows is available. The currently released stable version will always be available at:

jldrill.rubyforge.org

The version of this package is jldrill-0.5.1. JLDrill is considered to be beta quality, but it is hoped to be useful for end users. Bug reports and suggestions are welcome. The location for the documentation for this release is depends on where you are viewing this.

Installed Gem | Source Repository

License

JLDrill is copyright © 2005-2008 Mike Charlton. It is licensed under version 3.0 of the GNU General Public License (GPL) Please see the COPYING File for more details. Previous versions of JLDrill were released under version 2.0 of the GPL and you may choose that version if you wish. However version 3.0 represents a major improvement in clearing up ambiguous details, so I highly recommend choosing GPL 3.0 if you wish to extend this software.

License information for the various support files (dictionary, drills, etc.) are located in the data/jldrill/COPYING directory.

Development Documentation

Documentation on how to build and contribute to JLDrill is available:

Installed Gem | Source Repository

If you have installed from a development tree and have built the tests, then the results and test code coverage will be available here:

Installed gem: Test results | Code coverage

Source repository: Test results | Code coverage

TODO

The TODO file is maintained in an Emacs Org mode file. Org mode is a mode of emacs that allows you to easily organize data. The original file is text based and is easily readable and editable with any editor. But to publish the html file you need Emacs. The current published HTML file is here.

Installed Gem | Source Repository

Getting Involved

While I have built JLDrill on the work of others, as an entity on its own, I have been the sole contributor. There are many reasons for this, but regardless I am very enthusiastic about receiving any kind of contribution from other people. Even if you can’t write software, there are many ways you can contribute. I want to encourage this as much as possible.

Please address any comments, suggestions, corrections and patches to: [email protected]

I’m also very interested in receiving any new drills you may come up with. Please make sure to specify the license information for any material you send to me.