I am the OP. The Q card has hints or some other identifiers in brackets,
while the A card has the full answers. Examples:

Q:  [1] and [2]
A:  Answer 1
     Answer 2

Q:  [Hint-1] and [Hint-2]
A:  Answer-1
     Answer-2

Although this is indeed contrary to the principle that each card should ask
about one bit of information (as Peter pointed out in his reply), I find it
useful when parts 1 and 2 are closely linked and I am learning them as a
unit, or when each part is too easy by itself. Also when the parts occur in
the same Q sentence and have the same answer, e.g.

Q:  [Hint-xyz] blah-blah-blah, and also when [Hint-xyz] blah-blah-blah
A:  Answer-xyz

Scott

On Sun, Sep 24, 2017 at 7:25 AM, <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> Sorry I wasn't more precise. I'm interested in the same thing than the
> person who started the thread, which is being able to have multiple blanks
> without it being different cards i.e. something along the lines of
> Q:
> [a] d [b]
>
> A:
> a
> b
>
> Thanks.

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