Giving a grade 2 will result in a shorter interval than grade 3. Don't fret too 
much over it, just go with your gut feeling :-)

Peter

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:mnemosyne-
> [email protected]] On Behalf Of Marcin M.
> Sent: 19 December 2014 19:15
> To: [email protected]
> Cc: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [mnemosyne-proj-users] Re: Card schedule
> 
> Yeah, but practically? That I make a small mistake (e.g. confuse the article)?
> Or that I half-guessed the answer?
> 
> On Wednesday, December 17, 2014 5:23:55 PM UTC+1, Peter Bienstman
> wrote:
> 
>       Grade 2 means you remember it less than grade 3 :-)
> 
>       Peter
> 
> 
> 
>       On 17 December 2014 17:08:25 CET, "Marcin M."
> <[email protected] <javascript:> > wrote:
> 
>               Thanks! I'd rather Mnemosyne had grades 0..k, k in {6,7,8,9}
> than having half-grades. This way you can give yourself a grade with the
> keyboard quickly.
> 
>               And what is the grade 2 really supposed to be for? I'm in two
> minds.
> 
>               On Monday, December 15, 2014 2:28:33 PM UTC+1, Tonde
> Monai wrote:
> 
>                       I had the same problem for a while and decided about
> a year ago to adopt Peter's suggestion (before I saw his suggestion, of
> course). I don't give myself a grade of "5" unless the answer is immediately
> obvious to me, e.g.,
>                       Q: "What is the next letter in the Roman alphabet
> after 'A' "?
>                       A: "B".
> 
>                       I would gladly give myself a grade of "5" for that
> question. I would probably use grades of "4" for most of the Greek alphabet,
> but I give myself a maximum grade of "3" for most other questions. As a r
> esult, I may see some questions pop up more often than I think necessary,
> but it is never an annoyance to me.
> 
>                       Hint: if grades of 1.5 or 2.5 were allowed, the
> resultant flexibility might be more helpful to me.
> 
>                       Jack Thro
> 
> 
>                       On Wednesday, December 10, 2014 5:29:21 PM
> UTC+9, Marcin M. wrote:
> 
>                               Hi,
> 
>                               I've just noticed that a word I don't remember
> anymore has a revision in 1.2 years. I marked them as usual and remembered
> with the last revision.
> 
>                               Any ideas why it's like that?
> 
> 
> 
> 
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