For anyone not watching this bug on Bugzilla and using sqlite, there is
potential data loss involved when moving between sqlite and XML formats. Please
see the bug for more info. (reported earlier in the thread)
Regards,
Adrien
> On May 23, 2018, at 5:54 PM, Randy Orrison wrote:
>
> Thanks fo
Thanks for telling me what to look for: I've used DB Browser for SQLite (
http://sqlitebrowser.org/) and there are plenty of records in the slots
table with name=notes. Looks like it's just a display issue, so I'll hope
they re-appear when the bug is fixed.
Randy
On 23 May 2018 at 23:39, Adrien
For that sqlite search, look at the ‘slots’ table, specifically find all rows
that have ’notes’ as the ’name’ value and then look at the ’string_val’ field
for the actual note text.
The following query would return all data in a row that contained a note with
actual text. (but not return rows w
First, be sure to view the newer file with an sqlite viewer and verify the
notes are indeed missing. There are several free viewers around the web,
including a Firefox plugin if that’s what you use.(not sure if Chrome/Chromium
has one)
If they are indeed gone, short of figuring out how to pull
Hi,
Thanks for the confirmation. I have created bug
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=796369.
Unfortunately, saving as XML and reopening the file did not restore any of
my missing notes. Newly created notes in the XML file are being saved and
display correctly after re-opening the file
Keith,
This might get lost on the mailing list.
Please file a bug report and prefix the subject with: “RFE”. (Request For
Enhancement)
Regards,
Adrien
> On May 23, 2018, at 11:55 AM, Keith Bellairs wrote:
>
> Great idea. I did not know about the "right click filter by" on register
> windows.
Any report can either be opened in, or simply copied and pasted into, a
spreadsheet where you can fine tune all aspects of printing. (particularly page
breaks)
This also gives you the benefit of being able to do additional analysis or
include other calculations and likely create better charts u
That PS highlights I think the biggest challenge with the Business Features. As
long as they are a means to enter business transactions, no major issue arises.
But start trying to use them (and GnuCash in general) as a substitute for a POS
system...
Regards,
Adrien
> On May 23, 2018, at 9:29 A
Just out of curiosity, how many possible rounding rules can there be? I
shouldn’t imagine more than a handful. I don’t remember where I saw it, but
some application I used in the past had options to choose which of several
rounding rules you wanted to use. (I also don’t recall if this was financ
Great idea. I did not know about the "right click filter by" on register
windows. Right click context menu for accounts window would be perfect.
On Wed, May 23, 2018 at 12:19 PM, David Carlson wrote:
> Keith,
>
> I did not know about the "View > Filter by.." options being different in
> the Acco
Keith,
I did not know about the "View > Filter by.." options being different in
the Accounts window until I read your post. I think that it would make
more sense to have the "View > Filter by..." appear as the first selection
in the pop-up list when you right click in the page, similar to the way
I close accounts at year end. So if "view zero accounts" is not set, all my
income and expense accounts disappear. To find them I have to go to
"View->File By->Other" just to see them. Then when I want to turn them off
again to get rid of historical clutter I have to go the same way.
It would be c
After setting up my tax tables I realized it would be best if I renamed one
of the tables I had already created and used, but there is no rename
function. So, I created a new table using the name I wanted, and went
through each Vendor Bill that used the old table (there are only two) to
unpost, ch
I note that when printing a report to a PDF file, the page set up is a bit
hit and mis when multiple pages. Some lines of entries span into the footer
on one page and header of the next giving a split table. Is there any
method of having a complete row on one page and the start of a complete row
On 5/23/2018 9:17 AM, Nathanial Jones wrote:
The "It can't be fixed," attitude is just wrong, since there is a
conceptually simple fix.
It may take a while to code, but why not just put a check box or option
group into the tax rate setup that defines whether it is a "per item" or
"total" rate.
I
Op woensdag 23 mei 2018 15:17:52 CEST schreef Nathanial Jones:
> The "It can't be fixed," attitude is just wrong, since there is a
> conceptually simple fix.
>
> It may take a while to code, but why not just put a check box or option
> group into the tax rate setup that defines whether it is a "pe
The "It can't be fixed," attitude is just wrong, since there is a
conceptually simple fix.
It may take a while to code, but why not just put a check box or option
group into the tax rate setup that defines whether it is a "per item" or
"total" rate.
On Wed, May 23, 2018 at 8:46 AM Matthew Pounset
Thanks for all your replies. If just the people who have replied in the
last 12 hours is any indication, then a lot of people are "living with" a
fairly annoying bug.
In my case, this is on an invoice I'm generating, not a bill, so I don't
feel like I can mess with the data too much. Fortunately
There is no solution to this. Among other things, it would be dependent
on the rules of the jurisdiction whether the tax is supposed to be
figured per item or on the total of all taxable items. So what would fix
it in one case would break it in the other. It simply is true that
rounded(a) + rou
For rounding adjustments like these, I typically use the discount columns.
In your example, you can do the following to get the final total right -
Discount Type = “$"
Discount How = “=“
Discount = 0.01
The Tax Invoice report allows you to change some column headers, so I just
change the discou
I’ve been living with this for years.
The occasional bill has two extra lines (since bills are only internal records
it doesn’t matter that they don’t match).
The one is called “Tax Error” and is taxable; containing just enough in its
amount field to generate a penny of tax.
The other is called
Op woensdag 23 mei 2018 03:11:26 CEST schreef Matthew Pounsett:
> I've got an off-by-a-cent error on an invoice due to the way taxes are
> calculated. GnuCash (2.6.21) is calculating the tax on each individual
> taxable item, then summing that up, and adding that value to the subtotal.
> This caus
On Wednesday, 23 May 2018 02:11:26 BST Matthew Pounsett wrote:
> I've got an off-by-a-cent error on an invoice due to the way taxes are
> calculated. GnuCash (2.6.21) is calculating the tax on each individual
> taxable item, then summing that up, and adding that value to the subtotal.
> This cause
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