One of Arbital's goals is to solve online explanations. To see how that works, take a look at Bayes' rule: Guide. After you answer the questions, you are taken to the learning page (with a /learn/ URL) that shows the path that's been dynamically generated for you. You can also create /learn/ links yourself, as explained below.
Basics
The most straightforward way create a /learn/ link is to add the page id or alias to https://arbital.com/learn/ url. For example, both https://arbital.com/learn/bayes_rule and https://arbital.com/learn/1lz will work to teach the user about Bayes' rule.
Multiple pages
If you want to teach multiple subjects, you can specify them like so: https://arbital.com/learn/?path=bayes_rule_details,bayes_update_details,bayes_guide_end
The user will be guided to learn those subjects in the order they are listed. (Unless the prerequisites force one to come before the other.)
Adding the page itself to the path
For the examples above, the pages corresponding to the requisites the user is learning won't necessarily appear in the path. The only pages that appear are the ones that teach the necessary requirements. Sometimes you want to include the requisite page itself, though. You can use the "@" prefix to do that. For example: https://arbital.com/learn/?path=@bayes_rule_details,@bayes_update_details,@bayes_guide_end
This will force the bayesruledetails page to be included in the path as soon as the user has learned all its requirements.
Filter based on "wants"
Sometimes you might want to create different learn links based on the user's answers to multiple choice questions. Instead of creating a series of nested if-statements, you could instead mark the subjects the user wants to learn, and then use the "\$" prefix to only teach the corresponding subject if the user wants it.
https://arbital.com/learn/?path=$~$bayes_rule_details,$~$bayes_update_details,$bayes_guide_end
So, for example, the bayesruledetails subject will be taught if the user wants the bayesruledetails requisite.
If all the subjects in your path have "\$", you can set the "only_wanted" flag instead, which will automatically apply "\$" prefix to all the subjects. So this URL is equivalent: https://arbital.com/learn/?path=bayes_rule_details,bayes_update_details,bayes_guide_end&only_wanted=1
Stacking prefixes
You can combine prefixes, e.g. https://arbital.com/learn/?path=$@bayes_rule_details
Comments
Mark Chimes
The urls are displaying as: https://arbital.com/learn/?path=$~$bayes_rule_details,$~$bayes_update_details,$bayes_guide_end
I.e., $-signs are being interpreted as math mode.