Solved is a tool designed for you to reach your maximum potential. No more waiting while a bunch of kids brew up some chemical in a laboratory, no more watching as a SeƱora Julio explains all about the preterite tense. As you are playing Minecraft with the boys, Solved will bend the laws of time and carefully, with extreme precision, solve your edpuzzle assignment.
There are multiple ways to install Solved:
Pre-built binaries are available for 64-bit Windows, macOS, and Linux from the GitHub releases page.
You can build the latest release of Solved from crates.io:
bash
cargo install solved
or build the latest and unstable work from the main branch:
bash
cargo install --git https://github.com/ok-nick/solved
The assignment id is essential for Solved to configure your assignment, in order to retrieve this number, open the desired assignment and read the url.
The authentication token could be a little tricky to find, although there are numerous ways to retrieve it. It varies based on browser, but it is stored as a cookie on edpuzzle.com
under the name, token
.
For more information, run solved --help
.
--help
, -h
--version
, -V
--auth
, -a
--verbose
, -v
solved show
Displays a list of all the answers with pretty colors :)
Usage:
bash
solved show <assignment-id> \
--auth <auth-token>
solved answer
Answers multiple choice questions.
Usage:
bash
solved answer <assignment-id> \
--auth <auth-token>
--number <question-number>
Use the --number
argument to answer a specific question number, with respect to notes and concurrent questions.
solved complete
Completes the entire assignment by skipping time and answering all questions.
NOTE: Skipping time and answering all questions are essential for automatic assignment completion. At this time Solved is unable to answer open-ended questions.
Usage:
bash
solved complete <assignment-id> \
--auth <auth-token>
solved skip
Skips the entire video (unless otherwise specified), removing any time restrictions.
Usage:
bash
solved skip <assignment-id> \
--auth <auth-token>
--time <number>
--index <number>
Use the --time
argument to skip the video to the nearest time in seconds (rounds to the nearest 1/10th of the video's total duration).\
For whatever reason, edpuzzle splits videos into 10 time frames. Using the --index
argument, you could specify the time frame to skip to.
WARNING: The
--time
and--index
arguments only skip up until the answers you've solved. Although this is not the case when skipping the entire assignment.License
Solved is available under the terms of the Mozilla Public License, Version 2.0. See LICENSE for details.