Use case

Mood chart app for iPhone

Andy is a mood chart app for iPhone that turns quick daily check ins into weekly and monthly charts, with timeline detail and optional notes to explain what happened around each shift.

If you want a mood chart app, you are likely focused on seeing trends clearly, not just collecting entries. Andy pairs fast logging with readable charts and timeline context so chart review stays grounded.

What people need from a mood chart app

Mood chart app searches often come from people who already tried journaling but could not spot trends quickly. They want visual summaries without losing day by day context.

Andy builds charts from your regular mood logs and keeps timeline entries one tap away for detail when you need explanation behind a rise or dip.

This structure supports practical weekly reflection instead of chasing every small chart movement in real time.

The daily check-in

Chart quality depends on consistent logging, so the daily check in is kept short. One mood tap per day is enough to build useful weekly and monthly visuals.

Add tags or short notes when you want richer chart interpretation later, but keep the baseline habit simple to maintain.

Optional tags and notes

On heavier days, add a feeling tag or one short line about context. On quiet days, skip writing entirely. Both kinds of entries still show up on the timeline and in charts.

Reviewing your week

When a week blurs together, the timeline answers what actually happened on specific dates. Weekly charts show the trend without you building a spreadsheet.

Many people notice patterns only after a few weeks of small taps, such as lower moods after poor sleep or more neutral days than memory suggested.

Use charts to identify direction, then timeline entries to understand context. This two step review helps avoid over interpreting a single day.

Many people review charts once or twice a week, which gives enough signal for planning without creating constant monitoring pressure.

Reminders and streaks

  • Optional daily reminders help while you build the habit, then you can mute them when logging feels automatic.
  • Streaks count showing up, not whether the day was good. Missing a day does not erase earlier history.
  • Neither feature is required. Andy works the same if you ignore both.

Therapy and export

If you bring history to therapy, export a file you control or show charts in session. You decide what to share and when.

Andy is a logging tool, not a substitute for professional care. It supports honest review alongside treatment you already trust.

For therapy, charts can provide a quick overview and timeline entries can supply examples, while Andy remains a tracking companion and not treatment.

Get Andy on iPhone

Get Andy on iPhone, so you can test chart based mood tracking with real entries before deciding whether it fits your style.

Related reads include the mood tracker app use case page, the daily mood tracking feature page, and the mood tracker with export use case page.

For alternatives, check the Andy vs Daylio compare page and the simple mood tracker use case page.

Frequently asked questions

Can I use Andy as a mood chart app?

Download Andy from the App Store. Core logging, timeline, charts, reminders, and export are part of the app. See the listing for what is included in your build.

Do I have to write notes every day?

No. A mood tap alone is enough. Tags and notes are optional on every entry when you want more context.

Can I use Andy with a therapist?

Many people export a file or show charts in session. Andy is a logging tool, not a replacement for professional care.