![]() As mentioned, I’d like to use that functionality outside of lists. Just to make sure I am making my self understood : when referring to “steps”, I mean this or what’s described as " incremental lists" in the Pandoc documentation. Would it be possible to script my way to the solution ? Make a list where each element consists in a line of code that will fill in the blank in the originally displayed structure ? I have some very limited competence in Javascript, if that matters. Or a declension chart which you could fill progressively, while having set in the first step of the slide all the rows and columns.Īny idea how I could make that happen while retaining my ability to edit notes in Obsidian ? I am open to paid solutions as well.Imagine for instance showing a full sentence with blank, asking your student to fill it, and then showing him the solution not by showing the whole sentence again, but by making the missing part appear inside it. ![]() Different parts of my slide, even if not a list, would show up successively. ![]() But I’m willing to explore other solutions in order to achieve the following : something akin to cloze deletion in Anki. ![]() Given that the native “Slides” plugin does not, I have for the moment switched to Deckset (because of its simplicity). Quite a few external tools, such as Pandoc, Fusuma, or Deckset allow you to build (the terminology varies) lists that will show up element after element when presenting your note.I have been using Obsidian with much gusto over the last few days, it’s truly a fascinating, fluid and delightful tool (or should I say set of tools). ![]()
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