History
The History screen allows you to explore your past energy usage and production data in a clear and interactive way. It helps you understand how energy is consumed and sourced over time.
What You Will See
When you tap the History tab, the app opens a detailed view showing:
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A graph of energy data for Today by default.
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Summary panels below the graph showing total values for the selected time period.
Filter Options
You can customize the data shown using two main filters:
Time Period Selection
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Hours (default for daily view)
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Days
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Months
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Years
Data Type Selection
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Energy sources (default view): Displays energy by source:
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Production used (e.g., solar) – green
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Grid consumption – blue
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Battery used – black
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Production sold to the grid (if applicable)
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Load consumption: Shows energy used by household appliances or categories like:
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Water heating
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Lights
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Dryer
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Cooktop
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Electric plugs
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Interactive Graph
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Tap or hover over bars in the graph to see exact kWh/Wh values for each time interval (e.g., 197.63 kWh from 07:00–08:00).
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Tap on tiles to show or hide specific energy sources or devices in the graph.
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The graph displays the top 5 energy consumers individually. All remaining consumers are grouped together and shown as Others in the sixth tile.
Breakdown Panels
Below the graph, you will find summary panels showing total values for the selected period:
Detailed Load Consumption View
When Load consumption is selected:
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The graph becomes a stacked bar chart, with each segment representing a load category.
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Below the graph, panels show total consumption per category.
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All categories can be expanded to view individual consumers within each category.
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Tap See more to expand the Others category and view sub-categories like:
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Irrigation system
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Heating
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Heat pump
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Ventilation
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Floor heating
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Microwave
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Tap See less to collapse the list.
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Unmonitored consumption represents energy usage from devices or circuits that are not individually tracked or assigned to a specific load category. It helps account for the total energy consumption even when some sources are not directly monitored.