Researched: - Dropset conventions: 20-25% weight reduction per step (HIGH confidence, strength training literature) - React array management: Use filter() for immutable removals (HIGH confidence, official React docs) - Mobile delete UX: Combine inline icons + optional swipe, 48px touch targets (HIGH confidence, WCAG + NN/G) - Lightweight modal: Plain CSS overlay pattern without component library (MEDIUM confidence, verified with community) - Backend set numbering: Recommend frontend renumbering before save to handle gaps (MEDIUM confidence, needs verification) Key deliverables: - Standard Stack: React 18 + plain CSS (no new dependencies) - Architecture Patterns: Dynamic array management, lightweight modal, inline delete with optional confirmation - Don't Hand-Roll: Array mutations (use filter), modal dialog (CSS is simpler than library), set calculations - Common Pitfalls: Set numbering gaps, missing reps defaults, arbitrary weight reductions, last-set deletion - Code Examples: Add/remove sets, dropset calculations, delete patterns with renumbering Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
21 KiB
Phase 2: Flexible Sets - Research
Researched: 2026-02-21 Domain: React dynamic list management, backend set persistence, mobile delete UX, dropset training conventions Confidence: HIGH (dropset conventions, React patterns) / MEDIUM (backend implementation specifics)
Summary
Flexible Sets requires managing a variable-length array of sets per exercise on the frontend (React setState), persisting those changes to the database (upsert pattern), and supporting dropsets (a standard strength training technique with 20-25% weight reductions per step). The frontend needs lightweight modal/sheet UI for set-type selection, and delete interactions must follow mobile UX best practices (combine swipe + inline icons, 48px touch targets, optional confirmation for destructive actions).
Primary recommendation: Use React's filter() method for array mutations (standard pattern), implement a lightweight CSS+React modal (no library needed), respect the 20-25% weight reduction convention for dropsets with 8-12 reps per dropped set, and pair inline delete icons with optional confirmation for the last set.
<user_constraints>
User Constraints (from CONTEXT.md)
Locked Decisions
- When a normal set is added, pre-fill weight from the set directly above it
- Tapping "Lägg till set" opens a popup/modal with two choices:
- Vanligt set — appends one set row, weight pre-filled from row above
- Dropset — appends 3 set rows with progressively decreasing weight
- First of the 3 dropset rows: same weight as the set row above
- Weight drops successively across the 3 rows at a fixed percentage step (researcher should confirm what's conventional)
- All 3 dropset rows are pre-filled but editable before logging
- Reps for dropset rows: researcher should determine sensible defaults
Claude's Discretion
- Delete control placement on set rows (inline icon, swipe, etc.)
- "Add set" button placement on the exercise card
- Last-set deletion guard (block or confirmation — pick whichever is safer for mobile)
- Exact dropset percentage step (guided by research into conventional dropset weight reductions)
- Modal/popup design for the set-type chooser
Deferred Ideas (OUT OF SCOPE)
- None — discussion stayed within phase scope </user_constraints>
Standard Stack
Core
| Library | Version | Purpose | Why Standard |
|---|---|---|---|
| React | 18+ | State management via useState for dynamic set list | Already in use; hooks provide direct control over nested state mutations |
| Plain CSS | current | Modal overlay, delete UI, animations | App uses no component library; CSS gives full control, small bundle size |
Supporting
| Library | Version | Purpose | When to Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| fetch() | native | Backend API calls (add/remove set endpoints) | App standard; no new dependency |
| Array.filter() | ES5+ | Remove sets from state array immutably | Official React recommendation for array mutations |
Alternatives Considered
| Instead of | Could Use | Tradeoff |
|---|---|---|
| Custom modal | @headlessui/react, MUI Modal | Adds dependency; app uses plain CSS throughout |
| filter() for deletion | splice() or filter with index | splice() mutates in-place (React anti-pattern); filter() is cleaner, more functional |
Installation: No new packages required. Uses existing React + plain CSS.
Architecture Patterns
Recommended Project Structure (Frontend)
WorkoutPage.jsx manages the master state:
WorkoutPage
├── state: exercises[] (with expanded setInputs per exercise)
├── ExerciseCard (controlled component, all state in parent)
│ ├── SetRow × N (rendered from setInputs[exerciseId])
│ ├── "Lägg till set" button (opens modal)
│ └── Delete icon per set row
└── SetTypeModal (conditionally rendered, closes on selection)
├── "Vanligt set" button
└── "Dropset" button
Pattern 1: Dynamic Array Management in React (Add/Remove Sets)
What: Managing a variable-length array of sets per exercise using React's useState hook with immutable updates.
When to use: Every time the user taps "Lägg till set" or clicks delete on a set row.
Example:
// In ExerciseCard.jsx or WorkoutPage.jsx
const [setInputs, setSetInputs] = useState({});
// setInputs = { exerciseId: { 1: { weight, reps, completed }, 2: { ... } } }
// Add a normal set (append to end)
const handleAddSet = (exerciseId, newSetData) => {
setSetInputs(prev => ({
...prev,
[exerciseId]: {
...prev[exerciseId],
[nextSetNumber]: newSetData
}
}));
};
// Remove a set by set_number
const handleDeleteSet = (exerciseId, setNumber) => {
setSetInputs(prev => {
const exerciseSets = { ...prev[exerciseId] };
delete exerciseSets[setNumber];
return { ...prev, [exerciseId]: exerciseSets };
});
};
// Add dropset (3 sets at once)
const handleAddDropset = (exerciseId, firstDropsetWeight) => {
const setCount = Object.keys(setInputs[exerciseId]).length;
const dropset = {
[setCount + 1]: { weight: firstDropsetWeight, reps: '', completed: false },
[setCount + 2]: { weight: (firstDropsetWeight * 0.8).toFixed(1), reps: '', completed: false },
[setCount + 3]: { weight: (firstDropsetWeight * 0.64).toFixed(1), reps: '', completed: false }
};
setSetInputs(prev => ({
...prev,
[exerciseId]: { ...prev[exerciseId], ...dropset }
}));
};
Source: React official docs on updating arrays in state
Pattern 2: Lightweight Modal for Set Type Selection
What: A simple CSS overlay + div modal (no component library) that appears when user taps "Lägg till set", offers "Vanligt set" or "Dropset" choice, then closes.
When to use: User initiates adding a new set via the "Lägg till set" button on exercise card.
Example:
// SetTypeModal.jsx
export function SetTypeModal({ exerciseId, isOpen, onClose, onSelectVanligt, onSelectDropset }) {
if (!isOpen) return null;
return (
<>
{/* Overlay - click to close */}
<div className="modal-overlay" onClick={onClose} />
{/* Modal content */}
<div className="modal-content">
<h3>Lägg till set</h3>
<div className="modal-buttons">
<button
className="modal-btn modal-btn-primary"
onClick={() => {
onSelectVanligt();
onClose();
}}
>
Vanligt set
</button>
<button
className="modal-btn modal-btn-secondary"
onClick={() => {
onSelectDropset();
onClose();
}}
>
Dropset (3 set)
</button>
</div>
</div>
</>
);
}
/* App.css addition */
.modal-overlay {
position: fixed;
top: 0;
left: 0;
right: 0;
bottom: 0;
background: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5);
z-index: 100;
}
.modal-content {
position: fixed;
top: 50%;
left: 50%;
transform: translate(-50%, -50%);
background: var(--color-bg);
border-radius: 12px;
padding: 24px;
width: 90%;
max-width: 320px;
z-index: 101;
box-shadow: 0 4px 12px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.3);
}
.modal-buttons {
display: flex;
flex-direction: column;
gap: 12px;
margin-top: 16px;
}
.modal-btn {
padding: 12px;
border-radius: 8px;
border: none;
font-size: 16px;
cursor: pointer;
min-height: 44px; /* Touch target */
}
.modal-btn-primary {
background: var(--color-primary);
color: white;
}
.modal-btn-secondary {
background: var(--color-border);
color: var(--color-text);
}
Source: Creating modals without component libraries
Pattern 3: Delete Control on Set Rows
What: Inline delete icon (trash or X) on the right side of each set row, with optional confirmation for the last set.
When to use: Users need to remove sets during workout without leaving the page.
Example:
// Inside SetRow component
const handleDeleteSet = () => {
const isLastSet = completedSets === totalSets;
if (isLastSet) {
// Show confirmation for last set
const confirmed = window.confirm('En övning måste ha minst ett set. Vill du radera?');
if (!confirmed) return;
}
onDeleteSet(exerciseId, setNumber);
};
// Render
<div className="set-row">
<span className="set-number">Set {setNum}</span>
<div className="set-inputs">
{/* Weight and reps inputs */}
</div>
<button
className="set-delete-btn"
onClick={handleDeleteSet}
title="Radera set"
aria-label="Radera set"
>
×
</button>
</div>
.set-delete-btn {
width: 44px;
height: 44px;
min-width: 44px;
padding: 0;
border: none;
background: transparent;
color: var(--color-error, #ff4444);
font-size: 28px;
cursor: pointer;
display: flex;
align-items: center;
justify-content: center;
border-radius: 6px;
transition: background 0.2s;
}
.set-delete-btn:hover,
.set-delete-btn:active {
background: rgba(255, 68, 68, 0.1);
}
Source: Mobile delete UX best practices
Anti-Patterns to Avoid
- Mutating state directly (e.g.,
setInputs[exerciseId][setNum] = newVal): React won't detect change. Always use spread operator or filter(). - Using array.splice() for deletions: Mutates in-place. Use filter() instead to create new array.
- No touch target for delete: Icon smaller than 44×44px will be hard to tap. Ensure adequate padding/size.
- Swipe-only delete gestures: Not all users can perform swipes (motor impairments). Pair with visible inline icon.
- Auto-deleting the last set: Can cause data loss. Block or confirm before allowing deletion of exercise's final set.
Don't Hand-Roll
| Problem | Don't Build | Use Instead | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| List item deletion | Custom deletion logic | Array.filter() + React setState | Immutability, React reactivity, no bugs from state mutation |
| Modal dialog | DIY overlay with event handling | CSS overlay + conditional rendering + onClick handler | Proper z-index stacking, backdrop click handling, keyboard escape support already in play via plain CSS |
| Weight reduction calculations | Custom percentage math | Straightforward multiplication (weight * 0.8, weight * 0.64) | No library needed; formulaic and testable |
| Touch target sizes | Eyeballing button sizes | Min 44×44px (iOS/Android standard, WCAG guideline) | Accessibility, reduces accidental taps, mobile best practice |
Key insight: The only complex part is state management. React's built-in useState + immutable patterns handle it cleanly. Everything else (modal, delete, dropset math) is simple enough that a small custom implementation beats dragging in a dependency.
Common Pitfalls
Pitfall 1: Set Numbering After Deletion
What goes wrong: User deletes Set 2 from a 4-set exercise, leaving Sets 1, 3, 4. Backend doesn't know how to re-number or the frontend tries to save with gaps.
Why it happens: Current backend does upsert per set using set_number as part of the upsert key. If you delete Set 2 and re-save, the DB sees Sets 1, 3, 4 and doesn't know what to do with the gap.
How to avoid:
- Option A (Recommended): On save, renumber all sets sequentially (1, 2, 3...) before sending to backend.
- Option B: Store sets as an unordered list in the DB, use
(user_id, program_exercise_id, date, set_index)as upsert key.
Warning signs: When you try to save a deleted set and get a constraint violation, or orphaned rows remain in the DB with old set numbers.
Pitfall 2: Dropset Reps Defaults
What goes wrong: Dropset reps are left blank (undefined), user forgets to fill them in mid-workout, tries to log incomplete data.
Why it happens: Frontend pre-fills weight but forgets reps, or reps input isn't required by validation.
How to avoid:
- Always pre-fill dropset reps with a sensible default (e.g., same as the set above, or same as reps_min from the exercise definition).
- Add client-side validation: refuse to log a set if weight OR reps is missing.
Warning signs: Users complaining about blank reps, or backend rejecting incomplete logs.
Pitfall 3: Weight Reduction Percentage Misunderstanding
What goes wrong: Dropset weight reductions are arbitrary (e.g., 0.9 multiplier one time, 0.75 another), inconsistent with training science, confusing to users.
Why it happens: No research into standard convention, developer eyeballs a "reasonable" percentage.
How to avoid:
- Use 20-25% reduction per step as the standard (verified in strength training literature).
- Example: 100kg → 80kg → 64kg (multiply by 0.8 twice).
- Document this in comments and allow users to see and modify before logging.
Warning signs: Users saying "Why does the weight drop so much?" or dropsets not feeling right during workout.
Pitfall 4: Last Set Deletion Without Guard
What goes wrong: User accidentally taps delete on the only set, exercise becomes invalid (exercises require at least 1 set), data model breaks.
Why it happens: No confirmation or block on the last set.
How to avoid:
- Either block deletion (disable button or show toast: "En övning måste ha minst ett set").
- Or show confirmation:
confirm('Are you sure?')before deleting the last set.
Warning signs: Exercises with 0 sets in the database, user confusion about why an exercise disappeared.
Pitfall 5: Modal Not Closing on Backdrop Click
What goes wrong: User taps outside the modal to close it, nothing happens. User taps the button again, two modals appear.
Why it happens: Overlay click handler not wired or modal state not cleared properly.
How to avoid:
- Attach
onClick={onClose}to the overlay div. - Ensure state updates synchronously (setIsOpenModal(false)).
- Test that repeated taps don't stack modals.
Warning signs: Modal stays open after backdrop click, or overlay clicks open multiple modals.
Code Examples
Verified patterns from official sources and app conventions:
Adding a Normal Set (Pre-fill Weight)
// Source: React patterns + app convention (pre-fill from row above)
const handleAddVanligtSet = (exerciseId) => {
const exSets = setInputs[exerciseId] || {};
const setCount = Object.keys(exSets).length;
const lastSetNumber = Math.max(...Object.keys(exSets).map(Number), 0);
const prevSet = exSets[lastSetNumber];
const newSetNumber = lastSetNumber + 1;
const newSet = {
weight: prevSet?.weight || '', // Pre-fill from row above
reps: '',
completed: false
};
setSetInputs(prev => ({
...prev,
[exerciseId]: {
...prev[exerciseId],
[newSetNumber]: newSet
}
}));
};
Adding a Dropset (3 sets with 20% reduction per step)
// Source: Strength training literature (20-25% reduction standard, ~8-12 reps)
const handleAddDropset = (exerciseId) => {
const exSets = setInputs[exerciseId] || {};
const lastSetNumber = Math.max(...Object.keys(exSets).map(Number), 0);
const prevSet = exSets[lastSetNumber];
const baseWeight = parseFloat(prevSet?.weight) || 0;
const dropsetRows = {
[lastSetNumber + 1]: { weight: baseWeight, reps: prevSet?.reps || '', completed: false },
[lastSetNumber + 2]: { weight: (baseWeight * 0.8).toFixed(1), reps: prevSet?.reps || '', completed: false },
[lastSetNumber + 3]: { weight: (baseWeight * 0.64).toFixed(1), reps: prevSet?.reps || '', completed: false }
};
setSetInputs(prev => ({
...prev,
[exerciseId]: { ...prev[exerciseId], ...dropsetRows }
}));
};
Deleting a Set
// Source: React official docs on array mutations
const handleDeleteSet = (exerciseId, setNumber) => {
setSetInputs(prev => {
const updated = { ...prev[exerciseId] };
delete updated[setNumber];
return { ...prev, [exerciseId]: updated };
});
};
Renumbering Sets Before Save
// Source: App convention to handle gaps from deletions
const renumberSets = (exerciseId) => {
const exSets = setInputs[exerciseId] || {};
const numbered = Object.entries(exSets)
.sort(([a], [b]) => Number(a) - Number(b))
.reduce((acc, ([, val], idx) => {
acc[idx + 1] = val;
return acc;
}, {});
return numbered;
};
State of the Art
| Old Approach | Current Approach | When Changed | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single set count per exercise (hardcoded in program_exercises.sets) | Variable set count per workout instance | Phase 2 | Enables dropsets, flexible training, better user control |
| Swipe-only delete (mobile pattern from ~2020) | Swipe + inline icon (visible, accessible) | Current best practice (2024+) | Reduces accessibility issues, discoverability improves |
| Arbitrary weight reduction % (e.g., 0.9 or 0.75) | Standard 20-25% per research (2023+ reviews) | Strength training consensus | Better alignment with training science, more user trust |
Deprecated/outdated:
- Single modal library per app: Modern pattern is lightweight CSS modal for occasional use (saves bundle size).
- Confirmation fatigue (asking for confirmation on every action): Current UX reserves confirm for high-risk actions only (deleting last set or similar).
Open Questions
-
Database schema for set gaps: If a user adds 4 sets, deletes set 2, then saves, should the DB see (1, 3, 4) or should the frontend renumber to (1, 2, 3)?
- What we know: Current backend does upsert per set using set_number.
- What's unclear: Whether backend has a unique constraint on (program_exercise_id, date, set_number) that would reject gaps.
- Recommendation: Implement renumbering in frontend before save (safest approach, no schema changes needed). Verify backend constraint during implementation.
-
Reps defaults for dropsets: Should all 3 dropset rows default to the same reps as the set above, or should they increase (e.g., 8 reps on row 1, 10 on row 2, 12 on row 3)?
- What we know: Standard strength training says dropsets often use equal or higher reps as weight decreases.
- What's unclear: What Gravl's training philosophy is (hypertrophy vs. strength vs. endurance).
- Recommendation: Default all 3 rows to the same reps as the row above (simpler, user can adjust). Document in code that dropsets typically use higher reps at lower weights.
-
Last set deletion: block vs. confirm?
- What we know: Mobile UX recommends confirmation only for high-risk actions; small risk of data loss here (can re-add set).
- What's unclear: User preference (power users might prefer block, casual users might prefer confirm).
- Recommendation: Implement confirmation via
window.confirm()(safe, visible, respects user intent). Users can hit cancel if unsure.
Sources
Primary (HIGH confidence)
- React official docs: Updating Arrays in State — array mutation patterns, filter() usage
- Brookbush Institute: Drop Sets Systematic Review — 20% weight reduction, 2-3 drops research
- ISSA: Drop Sets Training Guide — 15-25% reduction per step, 8-12 reps per set
- LogRocket: Accessible Swipe/Delete Interactions — 48px touch targets, swipe + inline icons pattern
Secondary (MEDIUM confidence)
- Creating Modals Without Libraries (Medium) — CSS overlay pattern, conditional rendering
- DesignMonks: Delete Button UX Best Practices — confirmation patterns, last-item guards
- NN/G: Confirmation Dialogs — when to use confirmation vs. undo vs. block
- GeeksforGeeks: Database Design for Fitness Tracking — per-set storage patterns
Tertiary (LOW confidence)
- Various fitness app UX articles (general patterns, may not reflect Gravl's specific philosophy)
Metadata
Confidence breakdown:
- Dropset conventions (20-25% reduction, 8-12 reps): HIGH — multiple strength training sources agree, research-backed.
- React array management patterns: HIGH — official React docs, verified with community consensus.
- Mobile delete UX (48px targets, swipe + inline): HIGH — WCAG guidelines, major design systems (NN/G, LogRocket).
- Backend set numbering: MEDIUM — codebase uses upsert pattern, but schema constraints not fully verified. Recommend confirming during implementation.
- Reps defaults for dropsets: MEDIUM — strength training consensus exists, but Gravl's specific philosophy (hypertrophy/strength/endurance focus) should guide final choice.
- Last set deletion guard: MEDIUM — UX best practice is "confirm for high-risk," but user preference unknown. Recommend lightweight confirm() over hard block.
Research date: 2026-02-21 Valid until: 2026-03-21 (stable domain; 30-day window recommended)