This app was mentioned in 14 comments, with an average of 1.50 upvotes
Have you tried tracking your temperature?
When you ovulate, your temperature will go up, and stay up until your next period.
Often, the part of your cycle that is irregular is the first part (from the start of menstruation til ovulation). However, the part from ovulation til the start of your next period will be the same number of days (or really close). So, once your temperature goes up, you'll know when you ovulated, and after couple of months, you'll know how many days it is between ovulation and your next period.
You just have to take your temperature (in your mouth works just fine) every morning before you get out of bed/talk/do anything. It gets to be a habit quickly.
There are apps that help you keep track - two are OvuView and Fertility Friend.
Ok, so someone here (or several women here) have talked about OvuView so I've begun using it alongside my other app. Like Clue, it's got a more modern sleek interface with big happy buttons. Like Ovulation Calculator you can also look at it in a calendar view. When you start the app it allows you to select if your use is because you're trying to conceive or avoiding to conceive, and the apps notifications will change accordingly. You can enter all your already known data so the app already knows your longest & shortest cycles etc. You have plenty of other notes to add, like mucus & temperatures. Best of all you can share data (if you're trying to conceive you might want that), and there are several methods to choose from in order to be effective when TTC, like Döring rule, Rule K, etcetera.
(I'm trying, so I don't know what the app looks like if you're avoiding)
This app may be the one I settle on from now on, I like how it looks.
The app I use (OvuView) let's you track strong, medium and light bleeding and additionally spotting.
What's great here is that the app also let's you log whether the bleeding took place in the middle of your cycle or not. So the spotting at the end of my period never gets confused with ovulation bleeding by the app.
I really recommend the app because it also gives you great statistical overviews and more freedom in what you want to track and how you want to track it than any other app I've seen.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.sleekbit.ovuview&hl=en
This is OvuView, but it's only for Android users. Although it's theme is ovulation, I have tried every period app and I will never use another after using this. It is completely customisable, you can turn off the ovulation tracking if you want, and create ANY type of symptom you want to record, and it will track whatever you want. It will begin to predict your period based on default conditions and then adapt after learning your average length. There is also a note writing feature, and 3 viewing modes for either the calendar, the circle of time left showing your anticipated period, or the graph which visually presents all your symptoms together so you can watch where they worsen or improve in a pattern. You can also set alarms or reminders, and track medication.
It has helped me! :)
I've used OvuView for years because the interface is nice and clean (shallow, I know lol). But I also jot everything down on a planner.
I've been looking to make a calendar tracking app. I really like the Gui on the second photo on this app. Any tips on how to best make this happen? I haven't worked with the android calendar views yet.
Try OvuView. It uses several methods to calculate ovulation, you can enter notes and switch to pregnant mode I you finally get it.
OvuView is so fricken great. It let's you track your fertile days as well and let's you put in symptoms like zits, headaches, bloats, cramping, your slime structure etc. as well.
I feel so much more educated about myself now it's crazy.
Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.sleekbit.ovuview
I don't want to lose you to a competitor, but I just checked, and Ovuview is on the Play store. I'd also be happy if you checked out Clue though. (I'm Clue's designer.)
I use ovuview and ovulation calculator and , for a while also Maya
I use OvuView, and it's worked out pretty well for me.
I genuinely just love tracking things my body does. For period/ovulation tracking I use OvuView.
Clue looks good - though I use OvuView myself, I liked the interface and features. It has a free and paid option.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.sleekbit.ovuview&hl=en
Nie zgodzę się. Prawidłowo stosowana współczesna metoda NPR lepiej zapobiega ciąży niż prezerwatywa, w tym rzecz. Z gumą też się pomylisz, pęknie, trochę kapnie tu czy tam. W NPR zmierzysz źle temperaturę albo jej nie zmierzysz to Ci wyjdzie czarno na białym, że nie możesz dzisiaj i tyle. Wklepiesz w apkę w stylu Ovuview i Ci apka powie "nope". Czy może jak stosuję apkę albo coś w stylu LadyComp to jest grzech, ale jak robię wykresik na papierze to nie jest?
Czy liczy się to co i jak robimy, czy nasza intencja? Skoro grzechem są "nieczyste myśli", to czemu grzechem nie jest "chcę zapobiegać ciąży i robię wszystko żeby jej zapobiec, tylko nie mechanicznie/hormonalnie"? Jak dla mnie to hipokryzja.