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Obsidian Exercises

Obsidian Exercises was developed as an easy way to create exercises within Obsidian. Whether you are preparing for exams, learning a language, refreshing your memory, or any other purpose, you can now create them alongside your notes.

This plugin uses a block component as a base. Within it, you can define normal text and the exercise element below. Example:

```exercise
$match{Ich=>I, Wie=>We, Er=>He, Es=>It, Sie=>She}
```

Select

Match Exercise

Note: The Options Menu is not showing in the image above.

$select{"option1", "option2" [, …]}

Select an option from a drop list. Options are separated by commas, but consider always using quotations. For multi word values (that contain spaces) they are necessary. Options are randomized before being displayed.

To define a correct option you can simply prepend the option with an asterisk (for example: *"option").

Example — $select{"option1", *"option2", "option3", "option4"}

In the example above, there are 4 options and option 2 is the correct one.

You can define multiple correct options and they will all be evaluated. When revealing options, the first in the list will be the one shown.

Input

Match Exercise

$input{"option1", "option2" [, …]}

Input Text into a textbox. The options are evaluated as they are written. You can write one or more options, they will all be evaluated, but only the first is shown on reveal.

Example — $input("Correct Text.")

In the example above the correct input is "Correct Text.".

Line

$line{"option1", "option2" [, …]}

Line is a wider version of input.

Match

Match Exercise

$match{"option1"=>"value1", "option2"=>"value2" [, …]}

Match values from two columns. The matches are defined with "=>" and separated by commas. These values will be randomized before being displayed.

Choice

Match Exercise

$choice{"option1", *"option2" [, …]}

Choose one or more options from the multiple choice box. Options are separated by commas, but consider always using quotations. They are required for multi-word values (containing spaces). Options are randomized before being displayed.

To define a correct option you can simply prepend the option with an asterisk (for example: *"option").

Example — $choice{"option1", *"option2", "option3", *"option4"}

In the example above, there are 4 options, option 2 and option 4 are correct. All correct options and no incorrect options must be selected for the answer to be considered correct.

Thanks

@Raboro for fixing some typos

Support

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