[GNC] Migration
>
> Message: 12
> Date: Wed, 31 Jul 2019 14:01:05 -0700
> From: Clint Chaplin
> To: Gnucash Users
> Subject: [GNC] Migration
> Message-ID:
> ttfsqe4fpkot...@mail.gmail.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
>
> Hi all,
>
> I am looking for, well, some assuranc
I can say the migration process wasn't easy, but wasn't too hard. I was
able to do it and got it up and running with all my old quicken data. I
can't remember the number of years of quicken data, maybe 5-10 years or
more. I've probably been with gnucash for about 10 years maybe.
After all is sa
I won't comment on whether the migration process has become simpler over the
years, as I haven't done it in about as long.
There has been a huge amount of discussion over the years on the question of
migration from Quicken (usually tied either to the beginning of a new calendar
year, or the im
On 7/31/19 5:01 PM, Clint Chaplin wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I am looking for, well, some assurance here.
>
> How many of you migrated to GnuCash from another financial product? If you
> did, what did you migrate from? How much data did you have to migrate?
> And would you do it again knowing what yo
> On Jul 31, 2019, at 2:20 PM, Clint Chaplin wrote:
>
> I travel a lot on business, frequently to non-US destinations, where I am
> using non-USD currency.
>
> Currently in another financial program, I am handling this by essentially
> using an investment to keep the non-USD currencies. I tra
You set (or confirm the current) exchange rate when you enter the transaction.
So it can be any rate you need it to be.
While I haven’t traveled in a while, I still have a smattering of foreign
currency. I keep that in a Current Asset account called Foreign Currency as a
placeholder and a sub-a
I travel a lot on business, frequently to non-US destinations, where I am
using non-USD currency.
Currently in another financial program, I am handling this by essentially
using an investment to keep the non-USD currencies. I transfer USD to the
investment, purchase the non-USD currency with the
Hi all,
I am looking for, well, some assurance here.
How many of you migrated to GnuCash from another financial product? If you
did, what did you migrate from? How much data did you have to migrate?
And would you do it again knowing what you know now?
I am currently using MYM12 with 34 years o
On Wed, 31 Jul 2019, Adrien Monteleone wrote:
I didn’t mean it like that.
Adrien,
Thank you. It is far too common with e-mail messages to be mis-read or
mis-interpreted. Non-verbal communication (body language and facial
expressions) have been reported to comprise about 60% of face-to-face
co
Sorry Rich,
I didn’t mean it like that.
Regards,
Adrien
> On Jul 31, 2019, at 12:03 PM, Rich Shepard wrote:
>
> On Wed, 31 Jul 2019, Adrien Monteleone wrote:
>
>> The type of service doesn’t matter. Certainly, there are professional
>> services who pre-bill and who use accrual instead of cash
On Wed, 31 Jul 2019, Derek Atkins wrote:
1) You'll need to manually back out your AR and AP to convert from Accrual
to Cash, or
Sorry, but that's where we are. Personally, I use option #1.
Derek,
I'm not an accountant but I know that each taxing authority has different
rules and requirement
On Wed, 31 Jul 2019, Derek Atkins wrote:
This is a question of Cash vs Accrual accounting. The business features
imply Accrual accounting, so yes, if you have Receivables that *is*
included in the Income Statement.
I've unposted pending receivables and will no longer post them until the
checks
Hi,
On Wed, July 31, 2019 1:03 pm, Rich Shepard wrote:
> On Wed, 31 Jul 2019, Adrien Monteleone wrote:
>
>> The type of service doesn’t matter. Certainly, there are professional
>> services who pre-bill and who use accrual instead of cash-basis
>> accounting. (such a situation is exactly what accr
On Wed, 31 Jul 2019, Adrien Monteleone wrote:
The type of service doesn’t matter. Certainly, there are professional
services who pre-bill and who use accrual instead of cash-basis
accounting. (such a situation is exactly what accrual accounting handles)
That’s more a question for a CPA as to whi
The type of service doesn’t matter. Certainly, there are professional services
who pre-bill and who use accrual instead of cash-basis accounting. (such a
situation is exactly what accrual accounting handles) That’s more a question
for a CPA as to which is the best fit for you.
Regards,
Adrien
Assets don’t show up in the Income Statement (P&L).
They do show up in the Balance Sheet.
Sorry, I spoke to soon, as there is no way through account selection to
generate a cash-basis Income Statement while using the Business Features.
The posting date of the invoice is when the Income accounts
On Wed, 31 Jul 2019, Adrien Monteleone wrote:
If you want a cash-basis Income Statement, you’ll need to modify your
included accounts in the Accounts tab of the report’s Options.
Adrien,
It's not working. The 'defaults' selection colors all accounts blue (except
for a couple), but while ctrl-
On Wed, 31 Jul 2019, Adrien Monteleone wrote:
If you want a cash-basis Income Statement, you’ll need to modify your
included accounts in the Accounts tab of the report’s Options.
Adrien,
Okay. That is preferable to unposting invoices. Mine is a professional service
business so ivoices are sen
On Wed, 31 Jul 2019, Derek Atkins wrote:
This is a question of Cash vs Accrual accounting. The business features
imply Accrual accounting, so yes, if you have Receivables that *is*
included in the Income Statement.
Derek,
Ah so. That answers many report questions I've had. My business has alw
Hi,
On Wed, July 31, 2019 11:30 am, Rich Shepard wrote:
> Running gnucash-3.6 here. I downloaded the help and guide pdf manuals and
> assume they're for 3.6.
>
> Using the start/end date options for the income statement report I see
> revenues much higher than shown in the checking account when I
Rich,
The report is accrual based by default. It will include AR because that is
revenue that has been earned. Accounting standards require that revenue is
recognized when earned, regardless of when it is actually collected.
If you want a cash-basis Income Statement, you’ll need to modify your
Running gnucash-3.6 here. I downloaded the help and guide pdf manuals and
assume they're for 3.6.
Using the start/end date options for the income statement report I see
revenues much higher than shown in the checking account when I specify July
2019 as the date range. The brief description of the
Thanks for the explanation.
I just did a "save as" and now my dates are all in the new format. Much easier
to work with just one format for the dates. Also the new format is recognised
by the sqlite3 date function whereas the old format was not.
Thanks.
On Tuesday, 30 July 2019, 7:29:47
On Sun, 21 Jul 2019 at 07:00, AEG via gnucash-user
wrote:
>
> It appears that I had recently turned off the "Run when data file opened"
> option in Preferences when I tried to stop the window opening at startup. I
> don't find that window helpful because it lists every scheduled transaction
> when
Op woensdag 31 juli 2019 08:09:51 CEST schreef Fiable.biz:
> Hello.
> I'm not as interested in “input from users with actual accounting
> backgrounds” as in what IFRS for SMEs actually says.
Ok. In that case the current cash flow report is not what you're looking for.
It's not compliant at all wi
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