Search
The Search tab has two scopes: your own food list (the primary view) and the community database (a separate search). Each result shows the food's main nutrient ratios so you can compare similar items quickly.
Searching your foods
Start typing in the search bar. As you type, your local food list is filtered in place. The most recently used items appear at the top when the query is empty, so logging things you eat often takes only a tap.
Each row shows the food name plus a small subtitle with the key ratio for your current tracking mode. For example, on PKU in Phe + Exchanges mode you'll see mg phenylalanine per gram and grams per exchange.
Adding a result to your day
Tap a row to add that food to the date currently selected in the daily view. AccuGo opens the entry form pre-filled with the food and a quantity of "1 serving" — adjust the quantity, unit, or time as needed and save.
Editing or deleting from search
Tap the disclosure (i) on the right of any row to open the food editor. From there you can change any field or delete the food entirely.
The community search
Switching to Community queries the shared database of foods other AccuGo users have contributed. The first time you open this view, AccuGo asks you to accept the community terms once. Each result shows the contributor's country flag, the food's main nutrient ratios, and the same disclosure button to view the full record. See Community foods for what happens when you add a community entry to your own list.
New food shortcut
If your search query has no matches, the top-right + creates a new food pre-filled with the search text as the name. This is the fastest way to add something obscure that isn't in the database.
Search performance
Local search works while offline. The community search needs a network connection because it queries the server in real time. Results in both views are capped at a few hundred rows; if you don't see what you want, narrow your query.