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How can I see an Overview of All my Openings?

Is it possible to have all of my games analyzed, and have a computer point out particular points in my opening which I repeatedly mess up? I look at my games one at a time after I finish them, but often I will forget my mistakes after a little while and am not always sure what I should prioritize when working on my opening. Is there some sort of website that can do this, or if not, some general advice for openings? Thanks.
You can use chess insights to look up areas where you do badly and sort them by various filters (by openings for example). You won't get an analysis as detailed as you'd want, but you can see in which openings you do worse by looking at scores and/or acp. Also lichess has a built-in database of master games, so always after the game you can compare it to what the database recommends.
Alright, thanks, that's cool, just wish there was a better way. Also, when I try that, I'll get statistics for like b00, which is just e4, not a full fledged opening, am I doing something wrong?
While it's not automated, the study feature is great for something like this.

When you go over your game and see some opening mistake, create a study for that opening, with notes on where you messed up, what you were thnking you played the wrong move or why you didn't see the right one, what you didn't remember, etc.

As you make other mistakes in that opening, you can just add notes to your study for that opening.

Again, it's not automatic, but you'll have your notes of past mistakes in that opening in one place, and honestly, having to do it manually will help you remember it better anyway.

Hope this helps!

EDIT: To answer your most recent question, no, you're not doing anything wrong. The current system just uses ECO codes, which is pretty simple to implement but doesn't quite track openings the way humans think of them (one opening like the Sicilian Najdorf can span multiple ECO codes, and one of the catch-all ECO codes like B00 can capture very dissimilar structures).

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