But THESE are done differently in standard double entry bookkeeping.
- allow me to assign a category to each transaction. - create categories (or import quicken categories) and assign each as tax deductible or not. You will be creating ACCOUNTS and these can be in a hierarchy. Thus under the account "expenses" you could have two children, "tax deductible" and "non-tax deductible". Under these you would create child accounts. I suggest at a minimum you read the tutorial about the basics of double entry bookkeeping. A standard "101" text would be even better. The issue is that there can be only ONE hierarchy of accounts (called the chart of accounts, aka CoA) so when you want the effect of a transaction being in more than one "category" you have to give the CoA a finer structure, and for reports on just a "category" you may need to to account selection* Michael D Novack * quicker/easier to just run the full report, export that, and edit the raw report data to discard what you don't want. milliken wrote:
I've been frustrated using Quicken for years. Maybe GNUcash will do what I want. My list of functions is small: I use Quicken for personal accounting, mainly to categorize transactions for tax reporting. Can GNUcash do these things: - import data from a Quicken QDF file as a starting point. - allow downloads of transactions from my bank accounts and credit cards. - allow me to assign a category to each transaction. - create categories (or import quicken categories) and assign each as tax deductible or not. - report and summarize tax deductible transaction at tax time. That's all I care about.
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