> On 21 Mar 2019, at 14:46, D via gnucash-user <gnucash-user@gnucash.org> wrote:
> 
> It seems circular to say that there is a distinction between a simple and 
> compound transaction, and then say a simple transaction is a special case 
> compound transaction. Then we're back at defining the difference between, 
> say, a "split" transaction versus a "multi-split" transaction, which we're 
> trying to move away from as justifiably confusing.
What I meant was that the simple transaction is treated as a special case in 
that it appears on one line in the relevant GnuCash register - and in the 
context of some CSV imports might come in as a single line.

> 
> Calling one a "simple" transaction, and the others "compound" seems like 
> enough. Perhaps the explanation of the technical aspects of this (i.e., the 
> structure of a two sided simple, as opposed to an n-sided {n>2} compound 
> transaction), could use the term "split," as it is defined by  Gnucash. This 
> would disambiguate the use of the term "split," such that it would only be 
> used for this specific case. 
> 
> Regardless, I am still against the "Ledger entry" locution. 
> 
> Perhaps we need a translation from American English to British English…

I should have thought “Ledger Entry” would work on either side of the Atlantic, 
if not it’s clearly unsuitable!

Michael

> 
> David
> 
> On March 21, 2019, at 7:47 PM, Derek Atkins <de...@ihtfp.com> wrote:
> 
> "David T. via gnucash-user" <gnucash-user@gnucash.org> writes:
> 
>> I like the terminology “simple” versus “compound”, but I do not
>> understand what is meant by a “ two-line simple transaction as a
>> special case of a compound transaction.”
> 
> This is what happens you expand a simple transaction (which has only 2
> splits) by clicking on the "Show Splits" button, or change the View to
> Split-ledger or Transaction Journal mode.  It will display as a compound
> transaction but have only two lines (plus the blank spilt line).
> 
>> David
> 
>> Please remember to CC this list on all your replies.
>> You can do this by using Reply-To-List or Reply-All.
> 
> -derek



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