Install
openclaw skills install ai-notes-to-flashcardsTurn user-provided notes into a ready-to-review flashcard deck outline with active-recall questions, answers, tags, and review cautions.
openclaw skills install ai-notes-to-flashcardsAI Notes-to-Flashcards Builder converts messy study notes, meeting notes, project notes, or class summaries into a structured flashcard deck. The output is a ready-to-import deck outline with questions, concise answers, difficulty tags, source-note references, and review guidance.
Use only notes supplied by the user in the current conversation. Do not add outside facts, textbook details, medical guidance, legal guidance, or web-sourced claims. If the user's notes include medical or legal material, warn that flashcards may help with recall but should not be used to memorize unverified or outdated facts.
Use this skill when the user wants help with:
Trigger phrases: "Make flashcards from these notes", "Turn my notes into study cards", "Create active recall questions", "Build a flashcard deck", "Quiz me from my notes"
Copy and paste one of these prompts to get started:
Study notes to flashcards: "Turn these biology notes into a flashcard deck with 10-15 cards: Mitochondria produce ATP through cellular respiration. Ribosomes synthesize proteins from amino acids. The nucleus stores genetic information in DNA. Cell membrane controls what enters and leaves the cell. Lysosomes break down waste. Use basic Q/A style with easy/medium/hard difficulty tags."
Meeting notes to review cards: "Here are my project kickoff notes. Make flashcards I can review before the next meeting: Launch target is Q3. Lisa owns onboarding flow. Pricing model is freemium with $9.99 pro tier. Three competitors to watch: CompA, CompB, CompC. Tech stack is React + Node + Postgres. Use mixed card types and flag anything unclear."
Process or procedure cards: "Turn this onboarding checklist into sequence flashcards: 1) Create accounts, 2) Set up dev environment, 3) Review codebase walkthrough, 4) Shadow a teammate for one sprint, 5) Deploy a small PR. Use cloze-style cards for the step order and scenario cards for 'what would you do if' at each step."
Ask only for missing essentials. If the user already pasted notes, start from them.
Do not request permission to search the web. Do not infer facts from memory when the notes are incomplete.
State that the deck will use only the provided notes. If the user asks for cards about a topic without notes, ask them to paste the notes or offer a clearly labeled empty template instead.
If medical, legal, safety, financial, or professional compliance content appears in the notes, add a short caution:
Review the notes and identify card-worthy material:
Skip unsupported leaps, vague claims, and details that are too ambiguous to card safely. Mark unclear items as "needs clarification" rather than inventing answers.
Select card styles that fit the material:
Avoid overloading one card with multiple unrelated answers. Prefer one testable idea per card.
For each card, include:
Use the user's wording where precision matters, but simplify long answers for recall.
After the deck, provide:
Use this structure:
User says: "Turn these biology notes into flashcards: mitochondria make ATP, ribosomes build proteins, chloroplasts do photosynthesis in plants."
Skill guides: Create concise Q/A cards from only those statements, tag them as biology and organelles, and avoid adding details about cellular respiration or photosynthesis that were not in the notes.
User says: "Notes: launch maybe June, pricing TBD, Lisa owns onboarding."
Skill guides: Create cards for confirmed information only, such as ownership of onboarding, and place launch date and pricing under "Needs Clarification" instead of turning them into firm answers.
User says: "Make cards from these medical notes."
Skill guides: Build cards only from the pasted notes and add a caution that medical facts must be checked against current course materials, guidelines, or clinician-approved sources before memorization.