Add-ons are not supported, so while you can study image occlusion cards created with the computer version, they can not be created within AnkiMobile.
While AnkiMobile is able to display and schedule your cards in the same way the computer version does, certain changes like modifying note types need to be done with the computer software.
Please note that AnkiMobile is currently intended as a companion to the computer version of Anki, rather than a complete replacement for it.
- A free cloud synchronization service that lets you keep your card content synchronized across multiple mobile and computer devices.
- Support for displaying mathematical equations with MathJax, and rendering LaTeX created with the computer version.
Sales of this app support the development of both the computer and mobile version, which is why the app is priced as a computer application.
- The same proven scheduling algorithm that the computer version of Anki uses, which reminds you of material as you're about to forget it.
AnkiMobile is a mobile companion to Anki, a powerful, intelligent flashcard program that is free, multi-platform, and open-source.
This makes it easy to add content on a computer and then study it on your mobile, easily keep your study progress current between an iPhone and iPad, and so on.
- A powerful search facility that allows you to find cards that match criteria such as 'tagged high priority, answered in the last ten days and not containing the following words', and automatically place them into a deck to study.
For this reason, please start with the computer version of Anki before you think about buying this app.
For more information on AnkiMobile, including a link to the online manual, please have a look at the support page: If you have any questions or want to report an issue, please let us know on our support site and we'll get back to you as soon as possible.
- If your cards use images or audio clips, the media is stored on your device, so you can study without an internet connection.
AnkiMobile was written by the lead developer of Anki and AnkiWeb, and it has been around since 2010.