History

The History tab shows a chart of recent daily totals and a scrollable table below it. It's designed for quickly reviewing the last few weeks and for emailing a food record to your dietitian.

The chart

The chart at the top of the History tab shows daily totals over a 30-day window. The line you see depends on your tracking mode — typically phenylalanine (PKU) or methionine (HCU), with calories overlaid for context.

Behind the scenes, the chart also computes a simple moving average over the previous 14 days as a smoothed reference line, so trends are easier to see through day-to-day variation.

Tap a point in the chart to scroll the table below to that date. The selection is two-way: scrolling the table also moves the chart's window so it always reflects what you're looking at.

The table

Below the chart, each row is one day with its totals — date, the main nutrient(s), and calories. Rows newest-first. Scroll down to see older history; when you reach the bottom, AccuGo automatically fetches another page from your local database, and (if you're signed in) falls back to a server fetch for history that hasn't been loaded onto this device yet.

Tap a row to jump back to the Today tab on that date. From there you can drill into the individual meals.

"No data" state

If you have no entries logged yet, the History table shows a "No data" label and the chart will appear empty. As soon as the first entry is saved (and synced, if you're signed in), the view fills in.

Emailing your records

Tap the email icon in the top-right of the History tab to compose an email containing the current 30-day window as an HTML table. The body includes every day's totals, and the chart is attached as an image. Columns shown depend on your tracking mode — for example, in Protein, Exchanges, Phe, Calories mode you'll get all four.

The Subject line is filled with the active individual's name (if you have multiple individuals configured), so it's clear which person the record is for.

Tip — sharing with a dietitian

Email is the right tool for sending records to a clinic: it gives you a copy in your Sent folder, lets you add a note ("Last week I was sick Tuesday/Wednesday"), and is easy for the receiving end to file. AccuGo does not auto-share with any third party.

What "Email Food Records" in More does

The Email Food Records item under More opens a slightly different export: instead of just the 30-day summary visible in History, it lets you pick a date range and emails a more detailed log including individual entries (food name, quantity, time). Use this when your dietitian wants the breakdown, not just the daily totals.