![]() For my example, I placed it in C:\Users\Ben\wanikani.txt. I recommend putting it in your user folder, which is located at C:\Users(your username), but placing it on your desktop or in your root directory will work, too. Save this file somewhere where you can find it. The available timezone values are found at. Copy and paste the code section below, and modify the API key and your timezone as necessary. Open up Notepad or your favorite code editor. If it comes back with an error message, go back and try again. To test if this worked correctly, open a Command Prompt and type the command C:\php\php.exe -?. After you extract it, you should end up with a file located at C:\php\php.exe. You may have to create this folder first if it doesn’t exist. When the Zip file is downloaded, open it, and extra it to C:\php. If you don’t know, it’s probably “圆4”, and if 圆4 doesn’t run, then try x86. And then click on the “Zip” download link under either “VC15 圆4 Thread Safe” or “VC15 x86 Thread Safe”, depending on your operating system. Go here,, and click “Windows downloads” under the most recent Current Stable PHP version. ![]() If you already have a web server installed and you know how to run PHP from the command line, then you can skip this step. If any of you work with Mac OS/Firefox/Python/etc and want to convert these commands over and share them here, please do. These instructions are written for my computer environment, which is Windows 10 and Google Chrome and with PHP software. This means that you won’t have to check for reviews on your own, and it’s great for people like me who want to go through WaniKani as quickly as possible and stay on top of their Japanese studies. The major benefit for this method is that you are taken to the reviews as soon as they are ready. ![]() If there is, it will open up WaniKani for me, or else it will just let me know how many hours are left until review time and disappear. It’s a small script that runs every hour and checks if there’s a new WaniKani review session available. This is something I made for myself that I find very useful for me. ![]() To disable/re-enable this easily, see post 13 below. For Python instructions, see post 8 below. ![]()
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