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Before jumping to the conclusion that there is a "serious flaw" and bugs in the import process, perhaps it would be a good idea to attach the file you imported from so others can test and investigate properly?
BTW it's generally a useful approach to give software the benefit of the doubt before concluding that a problem you're experiencing is due to a bug in someone else's code, even though it might be. When I work with new programmers I often hear them say things like "... Why isn't this working? It must be a bug in the compiler." -- it almost never is :D
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Hi Peter,
Many thanks for your rapid explanation.
I have been through my wordlist and deleted all the answers to the questions. It does, in fact, contain 378 words (so I have lost one somewhere in the import). So I apologize for that. The 675 number confused me and I was sure my wordlist was longer than it actually is.
However, to answer your points:
- The text file I am importing from only contains two columns separated by a tab - the format is *source word - tab - target word(s)*. It is as simple as it could be
- I am not using any cards from earlier versions of Mnemosyne and my text file does not contain 3 columns
- I am not using anything at all from Anki
So the question still remains why this apparently totally arbitrary assignment to card types upon import? As I said above, I am importing from a totally uniform, tab-separated, 2-column text file. So why is the program assigning some cards a s front-to-back and some as Vocabulary?
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