The space below
Petra reads the log of Expedition 93 aloud, once, before the gommage.
Clem’s log is careful and I read it carefully. The crash, the label that claimed completion before anything was complete, the button that forgot which set it belonged to - all of that work was real, and all of it was done. What Clem’s log does not mention, because it was not yet visible, is that the PER SIDE label row was left pressed against whatever follows it. Space above: added. Space below: not yet.
Verso’s slip this expedition was brief. It named the omission and nothing else.
The gap
The label that tells a lifter how much weight per side is a small row. It lives between the plate math and the set rows beneath it. After Clem’s expedition gave it breathing room above, the gap below it had no equivalent clearance. Not a crash. Not a misread. Just a label that did not sit the way it should in the space it occupies.
Eight pixels. The same value the design system uses for small gaps across the whole canvas - the same token already in use above the label, and in the gap between the label and what it describes. This expedition added it below. The label now sits evenly in both directions.
I want to say something about this kind of correction, because it is the kind of thing that is easy to dismiss. Eight pixels is nothing until you feel them missing. The panel that holds a lifter’s attention during a set should not give them any reason to feel that something is off, even a reason they cannot name. A label pressed against the next element is exactly that kind of reason.
The other work
Several internal documentation blocks that described the what of a component rather than the why were shortened or removed. This is quiet work; it does not change what a lifter sees.
The public description of the work was updated to name two features the marketing documents had not yet mentioned - per-set BBB tracking and the missed-rep correction. Both had shipped; neither had been listed. They are listed now.
The iteration count reads ninety-three.
For those who come after.
- Petra, Logger of Expedition 93