ChristianKl comments on Open thread, January 25- February 1 - Less Wrong Discussion
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In general there the core principle of spaced repetition that you don't put something into the system that you don't already understand.
When trying to memorize mathematical results make sure that you only add cards when you really have a mental understanding. Using Anki to avoid forgetting basic operations is great. If you however add a bunch of information that's complex, you will forget it and waste a lot of time.
That's true if you're just using spaced repetition to memorize, although I'd add that it's still often helpful to overlearn definitions and simple results just past the boundaries of your understanding, along the lines of Prof. Ravi Vakil's advice for potential students:
The second point I'd make is that the spacing effect (distributed practice) works for complex learning goals as well, although it will help if your practice consists of more than rote recall.
If you learn definitions it's important to sit down and actually understand the definition. If you write a card before you understand it, that will lead to problems.
Yeah, I'm wary of that fact and I've learned the downsides of it through experience :)