What is the Study Schedule?
"How many pages do I need to read each day?" "Which of my textbooks should I prioritize?" — The study schedule feature answers these questions automatically.
Using your book's target date, total pages, and daily reading records, it calculates the required daily and weekly pace. It clearly shows which pages to read today and visualizes whether you're ahead or falling behind in real time.
Three Dashboard Tabs
The study schedule is a dashboard with three tabs, each offering a different perspective on your study progress.
1. Today's Plan
Shows each book's target page range for today. Books are sorted by urgency (behind > slightly behind > on track > ahead), so you can immediately see what needs attention.
- Target Page Range Displays specific start and end pages like "Today: p.123 ~ p.145 (23 pages)".
- Progress Status Four color-coded levels: on track, slightly behind, behind, and ahead. Overdue books are marked with a red warning badge.
- Progress Bar Visual display of overall completion percentage, giving an intuitive sense of how far you are from the finish line.
2. Weekly Plan
Overview of this week's study plan (Monday through Sunday).
- Weekly Page Targets Shows each book's target pages for the week alongside actual pages read so far.
- Weekly Progress Bar Visualizes this week's progress, letting you spot shortfalls mid-week and adjust for the remaining days.
- Weekly Totals Combined target and actual pages across all books for a complete picture of this week's workload.
3. Subject Balance
Groups books by hashtags in your notes (e.g., #math, #english, #programming) and compares progress across subjects.
- Average Progress per Subject Shows the mean completion rate for all books in each subject group, making it easy to spot which subjects are falling behind.
- Status Summary Displays the count of "on track", "slightly behind", and "behind" books per subject for quick assessment.
- Required Pace Shows daily pages needed for each subject group, helping you allocate study time proportionally.
How to Use (4 Steps)
- Step 1: Set a Target Date In the book information screen, enter a "Target date" — an exam date, deadline, or the date of your next book club meeting.
- Step 2: Log Your Reading as Usual Simply record the pages you read each day. No additional data entry is required.
- Step 3: Open the Dashboard Go to the View menu and select "Study Schedule". Check today's plan, weekly plan, and subject balance.
- Step 4: Adjust Your Pace If you're falling behind on a book, prioritize it. If you're ahead, consider shifting time to subjects that need more attention.
Recommended Use Cases
Exam and certification prep:
Set the exam date as the target for each textbook.
The schedule automatically calculates pace for each subject —
instantly revealing if math is on track but English is falling behind.
Book club preparation:
Set the next meeting date as your target
to see exactly how many pages per day you need to finish in time.
Parallel reading management:
When reading multiple books simultaneously,
use the weekly plan for overall volume and subject balance to avoid bias.
Tips for Maximum Effectiveness
- Use hashtags to categorize subjects Add hashtags like #math or #english to your notes. The Subject Balance tab will automatically group books by these tags.
- Log your reading consistently Regular logging improves calculation accuracy, giving you more reliable pace estimates.
- Check at the start of each week Building a habit of reviewing the weekly plan every Monday makes it easier to plan your study week.
- Set realistic target dates Choose dates that allow a comfortable pace. If the daily target feels too high, consider extending your deadline.