

The address it goes to is, where SOMETHING is whatever you typed in when it asked you “What German word would you like to multisearch?”. In the example with “ window.open(“” + q + “/#de”) “, it’s opening a new tab in your browser. Var q = document.getElementById(“boxu”).value What German word would you like to multisearch? Type below, then press enter please.ĭocument.getElementById(“boxu”).onkeydown = function(e) The code is really easy to read and change. If you like the Javascript solution but want it to search a different site (or an additional site), then all you need to do is download one of the multisearch HTML files and edit the code in a text editor (I like Notepad++ on Windows, Textwrangler on Mac). How to edit the code in the Javascript version (to change the sites it searches) Don’t forget that we also have our Fluent Forever app, which doesn’t use Anki, but can be way faster. Other websites also have pre-made Anki flashcards in various languages that you can check out. If you want to save yourself several minutes or hours of time making your Anki flashcards, then check out our Fluent Forever shop which has a number of resources you can use to speed up the process. Our current collection of multisearch links is as follows:Įnglish MultiSearch (for those who want to learn English)Īrabic MultiSearch Make Your Flashcards Even Faster It will download an HTML file that you can double-click and it’ll search ridiculously fast, since you won’t need to load our website every time you want to look for a word. Or for even faster searching, right click (control-click on a Mac) on the link you want, select “Download Linked File.” You can bookmark that link and reload as needed whenever you want to search for a word. Basically, you go to the link, type in your word, and poof – multisearch happens. So our tech guys, Matthew and Leonardo, created a javascript version of the multisearch scripts that we have, which appears to be way easier than all of the versions we’ve had so far. Typically, it’s a bit of a pain to set up, but in preparation for an upcoming workshop, I’ve decided to make it a lot easier. Basically, you click a button, a dialogue pops up and asks you “Which word do you want to look up?” and in 4 seconds, you have a Google Images link to the word, a recording, a bilingual dictionary entry and a monolingual dictionary entry. I’ve talked about using iMacros in the past.
