Workout tracker
A training log I actually use — quick enough to fill in between sets, and honest enough to show me when I'm stalling.
A few screens from the app I use at the gym.
What it does
It's where my training lives. I log each session — exercises, sets, reps, weight — as I go, and the app keeps the history so I can see whether I'm actually progressing or just turning up.
The whole point is friction: if logging a set takes more than a couple of taps, it doesn't happen. So it's built around getting a workout in and out quickly, with the analysis waiting for when I want it.
How it works
A lightweight web app I can pull up on my phone at the gym. Each session is saved locally and synced, and the history view rolls everything up into per-exercise progression — so a stalled lift is obvious at a glance rather than buried in a notebook.
It started as the simplest thing that would work and has grown only where I felt the friction. That restraint is why I've kept using it when every off-the-shelf app eventually annoyed me into quitting.