Il ne functionne pas encore je ne sait que faire..
This is only my problem ??
Not function any translation..
>Salut Alessandro,
>Peuts-tu faire celĂ , je peux pas le tester sur ma Mandrake 7.0, elle n'accepte
>pas le changement des locales:
>
>In a directory and with the sources you can
Rob Walker wrote:
>
> > On Mon, 24 Jul 2000 22:18:28 -0700, Clark Jones
> > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
>
> Clark> Bill Gribble wrote: [...]
>
> >> 1. gnc_commodity knows about the smallest possible transactional
> >> unit for trading the commodity (for example, 1/100 of a US Dollar
> >>
Richard Wackerbarth writes:
> In practice, accounting always restricts the allowable values.
In practice, reality always restricts the allowable values. I don't see
how we can predict what those restrictions will be for anything but money,
though. Nor do I see the necessity of doing so.
> Rath
I forgot - Sun not only announce GPL of StarOffice (with other licenses
optional - that's another story), they've founded
http://www.openoffice.org, whose charter is to be a repository of
XML DTDs to push for commoditization of all the office protocols and
file formats. They're going to turn oper
On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, Glen Ditchfield wrote:
> On Mon, 24 Jul 2000, Bill Gribble wrote:
> > 1. gnc_commodity knows about the smallest possible transactional
> > unit for trading the commodity (for example, 1/100 of a US Dollar
> > or 1/1000 of a mutual fund share).
> Is the smallest tr
I will be out of email contact starting tomorrow until August 3 or so, fyi.
Please send any patches to [EMAIL PROTECTED] and I will get them
when I get back. Thanks!
dave
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Steven Murdoch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> "Floor(X): returns the largest (most positive) integral value less than
> or equal to X. When X is zero, the result has the sign of X; a zero
> result otherwise has a positive sign.
>
> Ceil(X) returns the smallest (most negative) integral value great
On Mon, 24 Jul 2000, Bill Gribble wrote:
> 2. gnc_commodity : representing currencies and other commodities
>
> 1. gnc_commodity knows about the smallest possible transactional
> unit for trading the commodity (for example, 1/100 of a US Dollar
> or 1/1000 of a mutual fund share).
Is
Phillip J Shelton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Not really up on what is available my self so my comment is `Are
> there any engines out there that already do this type of math?
>
> And would it be safe to say you are looking at some kind of integer
> math?
The actual math code is quite simple.
I haven't been on this list for long, so if this has already been
discussed please accept my apologies.
One thing I was unsure about was in the gnc_numeric API was about the
handling of negative amounts, especially during rounding. I have a few
questions/suggestions about this
For Floor and Ceil
On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, John Hasler wrote:
> Bill Gribble writes:
> > Are there *any* places where correct record keeping requires one to keep
> > track of dollar values down to the 1/1000 of a dollar?
>
> Property tax rates are stated in mills, but the actual tax bills are always
> in dollars and ce
On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, you wrote:
> Clark Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > I hate to quibble with Gribble :-), but in actuallity the bill establishing
> > the Dollar as the U.S. currency (written by Thomas Jefferson) defines the
> > "mill" -- which is 1/1000 of a U.S. Dollar -- though the only
Bill Gribble writes:
> Are there *any* places where correct record keeping requires one to keep
> track of dollar values down to the 1/1000 of a dollar?
Property tax rates are stated in mills, but the actual tax bills are always
in dollars and cents.
--
John Hasler
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Hasler
On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, John Hasler wrote:
> Richard Wackerbarth writes:
> > Actually, price is a rational and quantity is an integer. (At least in
> > the pumps that I helped program)
>
> I'm not talking about gasoline anymore, but about prices and quantities in
> general. Treating price and quant
On Mon, 24 Jul 2000 23:46:47 -0400, the world broke into rejoicing as
Jason Rennie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] said:
> > This sounds like a restricted sort of "find and replace" operation.
> > It would be a handy thing to have on its own, not just as a part of a
> > QIF importer
Bill Gribble wrote:
>
> Clark Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > I hate to quibble with Gribble :-), but in actuallity the bill establishing
> > the Dollar as the U.S. currency (written by Thomas Jefferson) defines the
> > "mill" -- which is 1/1000 of a U.S. Dollar -- though the only places wh
Richard Wackerbarth writes:
> Actually, price is a rational and quantity is an integer. (At least in
> the pumps that I helped program)
I'm not talking about gasoline anymore, but about prices and quantities in
general. Treating price and quantity as reals (always rationals or
integers in pract
On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, Bill Gribble wrote:
> I definitely don't think rounding should be a default. For most
> financial transactions, the math you're doing won't require any
> rounding/truncation at all, and for the ones that do (total-value
> computations, for example) you probably want to use R
Buddha Buck wrote:
>
> At 09:29 AM 7/25/00 -0500, you wrote:
> >Clark Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > > I hate to quibble with Gribble :-), but in actuallity the bill establishing
> > > the Dollar as the U.S. currency (written by Thomas Jefferson) >
> > > defines the "mill" -- which is 1/10
Buddha Buck writes:
> I know that the local gas pumps do accurately treat the $1.699/gallon
> price as $1.699/gallon -- when I buy 10.000 gallons, I pay $16.99, not
> $17.00.
And when you buy 11.000 gallons you will be billed $18.69 (or maybe
$18.68), not $18.689.
> The pump evidentially knows a
On Mon, 24 Jul 2000 20:00:11 EST, the world broke into rejoicing as
Jon Trowbridge <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> On Mon, Jul 24, 2000 at 05:41:58PM -0500, Bill Gribble wrote:
> > 2. gnc_commodity knows the full name of the commodity
> > ("International Business Machines", "US Dollars"), plus
On 25 Jul 2000 18:17:35 EST, the world broke into rejoicing as
John Hasler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> Richard Wackerbarth writes:
> > Actually, price is a rational and quantity is an integer. (At least in
> > the pumps that I helped program)
>
> I'm not talking about gasoline anymore, but abou
On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, you wrote:
> Terry writes:
> > Yes stock transactions
>
> Your broker bills you in thousandths of a dollar?
> --
Actually - yes - the stock are purchased through dividend re-investment. The
dividend is computed to 1/1,000 USD (stock total is carried on their books to
1/1,000
On 25 Jul 2000 09:29:49 EST, the world broke into rejoicing as
Bill Gribble <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> Clark Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > I hate to quibble with Gribble :-), but in actuallity the bill establishing
> > the Dollar as the U.S. currency (written by Thomas Jefferson) defines
Clark Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I hate to quibble with Gribble :-), but in actuallity the bill establishing
> the Dollar as the U.S. currency (written by Thomas Jefferson) defines the
> "mill" -- which is 1/1000 of a U.S. Dollar -- though the only places where
> you're likely to run into
At 09:29 AM 7/25/00 -0500, you wrote:
>Clark Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > I hate to quibble with Gribble :-), but in actuallity the bill establishing
> > the Dollar as the U.S. currency (written by Thomas Jefferson) defines the
> > "mill" -- which is 1/1000 of a U.S. Dollar -- though the
On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, Terry wrote:
> Actually - yes - the stock are purchased through dividend re-investment.
> The dividend is computed to 1/1,000 USD (stock total is carried on their
> books to 1/1,000 and the dividend is computed to 1/1,000 USD per stock
> unit.) Thus the transaction value in US
On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, John Hasler wrote:
> The pump knows that 1.699 * gallons = total sale, anyway.
> IMHO transaction_total != price * quantity.
> Rather, transaction_total = f(price, quantity)
>
> where transaction_total is an integer,
> price and quantity are reals, and
Actually, price is
On Tue, 25 Jul 2000, Bill Gribble wrote:
> Clark Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > I hate to quibble with Gribble :-), but in actuallity the bill
> > establishing the Dollar as the U.S. currency (written by Thomas
> > Jefferson) defines the "mill" -- which is 1/1000 of a U.S. Dollar --
> > tho
Terry writes:
> Yes stock transactions
Your broker bills you in thousandths of a dollar?
--
John Hasler
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Hasler)
Dancing Horse Hill
Elmwood, WI
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