How bookmarking works
A star icon sits on every question stem, every note header, and every mind-map node. Tap it to bookmark. Tap again to un-bookmark. No folders to manage — just a single clean list, filterable after the fact.
The philosophy is: bookmark generously during practice, curate ruthlessly in the final week. Your lived-in bookmark list is more valuable than any pre-made revision pack someone else could hand you.
Building your final-week pack
- 1During practice: bookmark any question that made you pause, any note you'd want to re-read, any mind-map node you felt shaky on.
- 2Weekly: skim your recent bookmarks on Sunday — a 20-minute pass is enough.
- 3Final two weeks: filter bookmarks to 'added in the last 4 weeks' and drill them.
- 4Exam eve: do a final pass on the bookmarks you still haven't cleared. That's your exam-eve pack.
Turning bookmarks into flashcards
In the final week, re-reading a bookmark is passive. The faster path to retention is to convert your bookmark list into a flashcard set and drill it with retrieval practice. A single click generates a set from your current bookmarks.
Bookmark + convert is better than bookmark + re-read
Bookmarks are a save mechanism. Flashcards are a drill mechanism. Using both together is the most reliable way to turn a list of saved items into durable knowledge.
Frequently asked questions
Do bookmarks sync across devices?+
Yes. Bookmarks live in your account, so switching between your laptop and your phone picks up exactly where you left off.
Is there a limit on how many I can bookmark?+
No meaningful limit. We'd caution against bookmarking everything — curate your list, or it loses its value as a focused revision pack.
Can I share a bookmark list with a study partner?+
Not today. Sharing is a roadmap item; the private workflow is the primary one.