Files
Spanish/docs/spanish-fundamentals/EXTRACTION_REPORT.md
Trey t 47a7871c38 Add 13 new grammar notes with 1010 exercises from video extraction
Scraped a 4h Spanish fundamentals YouTube video (transcript + OCR on
14810 frames), extracted structured content across 52 chapters, and
generated fill-in-the-blank quizzes for every grammar topic.

- 13 new GrammarNote entries (articles, possessives, demonstratives,
  greetings, poder, al/del, prepositional pronouns, irregular yo,
  stem-changing, stressed possessives, present/future perfect, present
  indicative conjugation)
- 1010 generated exercises across all 36 grammar notes (new + existing)
- Fix tense guide parser to handle unnumbered *Usages* blocks
- Rewrite 6 broken tense guide bodies (imperative, subj pluperfect,
  subj future) with numbered usage format
- Bump courseDataVersion 5→6 with TenseGuide refresh on upgrade
- Add docs/spanish-fundamentals/ with raw transcripts, polished notes,
  structured JSON, and exercise data

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-16 08:40:05 -05:00

52 lines
3.2 KiB
Markdown

# Extraction Report
- Chapters processed: **52** / 52
- Rules: 168
- Examples (es/en pairs): 572
- Vocab items: 410
- Conjugation tables: 143
- Fill-in exercises: 370
## Chapter → Conjuga GrammarNote mapping
| Grammar Note | Chapters |
|-------------|----------|
| `accent-marks-stress` | 02 |
| `adjective-placement` | 08 |
| `commands-imperative` | 36, 37 |
| `comparatives-superlatives` | 34 |
| `conditional-if-clauses` | 43, 44 |
| `double-negatives` | 35 |
| `estar-gerund-progressive` | 06 |
| `future-vs-ir-a` | 13, 41 |
| `gustar-like-verbs` | 20 |
| `object-pronouns` | 17, 18, 19 |
| `por-vs-para` | 33 |
| `preterite-vs-imperfect` | 25, 26, 27, 28, 31, 40 |
| `reflexive-verbs` | 29, 30 |
| `relative-pronouns` | 45 |
| `saber-vs-conocer` | 23, 24 |
| `ser-vs-estar` | 05, 07, 38 |
| `subjunctive-triggers` | 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51 |
| `tener-expressions` | 14 |
## Chapters not mapped to an existing GrammarNote
These represent topics that could become NEW GrammarNotes:
- **01** The Introduction — Author introduces the 4-hour compilation video as a stitched collection of every prior Spanish-fundamentals video on his
- **03** Conjugating Verbs (Present) — How to conjugate regular -ar/-er/-ir verbs in the present indicative by dropping the infinitive ending and adding one of
- **04** Articles — Definite (el/la/los/las) and indefinite (un/una/unos/unas) articles, gender/number agreement, and common exceptions like
- **09** Possessive Adjectives — Spanish possessive adjectives precede the noun and agree in number; only nuestro and vuestro also agree in gender. The a
- **10** Demonstrative Adjectives — Spanish demonstratives (este/ese/aquel) precede the noun and agree in gender and number. Neuter forms (esto/eso/aquello)
- **11** Useful Greetings & Farewells — A practical inventory of Spanish greetings, farewells, and polite phrases, with literal breakdowns explaining how each e
- **12** The Verb "Poder" — Poder ('to be able to / can') is a stem-changing verb (o → ue) in the boot forms. It pairs directly with an infinitive —
- **15** al & del — Spanish contracts a + el into al and de + el into del to eliminate the redundant vowel sound; these are the only two man
- **16** Prepositional Pronouns — Prepositional pronouns follow prepositions; only yo and tú change (to mí and ti), and con combines into conmigo and cont
- **21** Irregular Yo Verbs — A group of Spanish verbs are regular in every present-tense form except the yo form, which takes an irregular ending suc
- **22** Stem-Changing Verbs — Stem-changing verbs modify their internal vowel in all conjugations except nosotros and vosotros. Four categories exist:
- **32** Stressed Possessive Adjectives — Stressed possessive adjectives (mío, tuyo, suyo, nuestro, vuestro) indicate ownership and follow the noun or ser; they a
- **39** Present Perfect Tense — The present perfect (pretérito perfecto) expresses what someone has done. It uses present-tense haber + past participle
- **42** Future Perfect Tense — The future perfect (futuro perfecto) expresses what will have happened by some point in the future. It uses future haber
- **52** The Conclusion — Closing remarks for the Spanish fundamentals series. The narrator emphasizes that the series teaches how to THINK in Spa