> On Jul 7, 2017, at 10:54 AM, Paul Leniston <paullenis...@hotmail.com> wrote: > > I have just downloaded gnucash and am a little confused. > > > I have two bank accounts, one in UK and one in Spain. Do I need a > differrent common account for each one? > > > In the UK bank I have three accounts. There is a current account, a deposit > account and a credit card account. Do I need a different common account for > each one. > > > Finally I have two long term savings accounts at different banks. Do I need > a different common account for each one? >
What do you mean by "common account"? The placeholder that groups them? Most folks group their accounts so that the accounts page summarizes their assets in a way that makes sense to them. For personal finances there are very few rules. If you want to see the totals by currency and bank you could do: Assets GBP Bank1 Current Deposit Bank2 Savings Bank3 Savings EUR Bank4 Current Liabilities GBP Bank1 Credit Card OTOH if you wanted to emphasize the holding term you might do Assets Current GBP Bank1 Current EUR Bank4 Current Deposit GBP Bank1 Deposit Savings GBP Bank2 Savings Bank3 Savings Liabilities Credit Card GBP Bank1 Credit Card For pure currency accounts the GBP and EUR placeholders are optional, but for non-currency accounts (i.e. STOCK or FUND accounts) there must be a parent account in the currency used to price the account. Regards, John Ralls _______________________________________________ gnucash-user mailing list gnucash-user@gnucash.org https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-user ----- Please remember to CC this list on all your replies. You can do this by using Reply-To-List or Reply-All.