Guide

Structure of your opening repertoire

The structure of your repertoire is what lets you know which openings you have, how they are organized, and what you need to study at each moment.

In Reperto, that structure starts from the creation of each opening and continues with folders, tags, progress, and pending flashcards.

Create each opening with the right context

Reperto’s organization system starts when you create an opening. Each opening can be marked by color, so you can separate what you prepare with White from what you prepare with Black.

In Black openings, you can also organize the content by the opponent’s first move: against 1.e4, against 1.d4, or any other replies you want to prepare.

That way, your repertoire does not remain as a flat list of files. Each opening is born with clear context: which color you are preparing and what type of position you are going to play against.

Folders, subfolders, and every level you need

Inside each opening, you can create folders. And inside those folders, more folders. The idea is that you can organize your files by as many levels as you need, without having to adapt to a rigid structure that does not fit the way you study.

We also focus on making navigation fast and fluid, so you can enter your files in a couple of clicks without wasting time searching for where each line was.

Know what you have studied and what you still need to review

A good structure is not only useful for saving files. It also has to tell you what is happening with your study. In Reperto, you can measure the progress you have made in each of your openings and see which part of your repertoire you have already worked on.

You can also see pending flashcards: the positions you failed during training and that still need review. This makes your repertoire not just a set of organized files, but a system that helps you decide what to study next.