Settings

Settings are reached from More → Settings → Options. They're shared across all individuals on the account and synced between your devices.

Tracking Mode

Determines which nutrient values are shown in the summary banner, the daily list subtitles, and the chart.

PKU options:

HCU options:

Exchange Size PKU only

Defines how many milligrams of phenylalanine make up one "exchange". Pick the value your dietitian uses (commonly 10, 15, or 50 mg, but other values are available). Set to Not tracked to hide exchanges in summaries entirely.

Exchanges are only displayed if your tracking mode includes them and the Exchange Size is non-zero.

Time Grouping

Controls how entries in the daily log are grouped under section headers by time:

On HCU, the 1-minute option isn't offered.

Display More Precision

Off (default) shows nutrient values rounded to whole numbers in summaries and most lists. Turn it on if your dietary plan requires more decimal places — for example, half-exchanges or per-gram precision.

Show Tabs

Off hides the per-individual segmented control at the top of the Today tab, even if multiple individuals are active. Use this to keep one person's view simpler.

Simplified Diet PKU only

When on, foods marked as "Simplified" in your food list have their phenylalanine and protein counted as zero in your daily summaries. This matches the way "free foods" work in a simplified-diet plan: log them so you have a record, but they don't count toward your daily targets.

Daily Target Notification PKU only

Sends a local notification near the end of the day if you have a daily target set for a particular nutrient. Pick which nutrient drives the notification:

Daily Target Value PKU only

A numeric value paired with the notification setting above. Set this to your daily allowance for the chosen nutrient (for example, 400 mg phenylalanine or 60 g protein). AccuGo compares it to your day's total when deciding what to notify.

Acknowledgements

The Acknowledgements pane lists the third-party libraries AccuGo uses (FSCalendar for the calendar picker, JBChartView and Swift Charts for graphing, FMDB for database access, AFNetworking for network requests, and others). It's informational; nothing in it is interactive.

Where settings are stored

Settings are saved both in iOS user defaults and in the app's own database, and they sync to your account if you're signed in. Changing a setting on one device propagates to your others on the next sync.