You're more than welcome.
This forum is a real fantastic source of support. People chime in from all
over with good info.
I looked up the original thread ("Font", back in April 2019) in order to
give credit to the person that supplied the solution.
His name is Adrien Monteleone. I think he is
Nope, not yet anyway. I just try to help out as much as I can on the list, but
thanks! (that *was* quite a long thread that did a deep dive into customizing
the UI. And it was very much a team effort.)
Regards,
Adrien
> On Sep 4, 2019 w36d247, at 5:12 PM, Rare Bear wrote:
>
> You're more than
My experience is not very different from Rich's. Printing from Chromium
works one way, from Firefox, another way, and I so rarely print directly
from GnuCash that I do not remember. This is in Ubuntu 18.04.
David Carlson
On Wed, Sep 4, 2019 at 3:44 PM Rich Shepard
wrote:
> On Wed, 4 Sep 2019,
That worked. Thanks. I played around with it a bit and ended up with 13pt times
new roman; Much easier on the eyes. Appreciate the help.
From: Rare Bear
Sent: Wednesday, September 4, 2019 1:24 PM
To: David Carlson
Cc: Roger Oliver ; Gnucash Users
Subject: Re: [GNC] Font size in journals ve
On Wed, 4 Sep 2019, Adrien Monteleone wrote:
Sorry, stumped on that one.
Adrien,
That makes two of us.
... but I don’t recall having a default starting directory issue with other
apps. Do you have that option and does it present the same issue with the
default location? (I don’t recall what
Sorry, stumped on that one. I rarely if ever use the print-to-file function on
anything. I just install cups-pdf and print to a pdf folder and then move from
there, or specify on printing, but I don’t recall having a default starting
directory issue with other apps. Do you have that option and d
Let me try to be of help. Please don't give me credit for this as I got
all of the info from this very forum.
1. Create a txt file named
gtk-3.0.css
2. In the text file include the format below (substitute a different point
size and font of your choice)
* {
font: 15px consolas, sans-serif;
}
On Wed, 4 Sep 2019, Adrien Monteleone wrote:
I thought it defaulted to the last used location, but if not, investigate CUPS.
Adrian,
No, it doesn't remember the last used location. The issue is not CUPS
because GnuCash is the only application I run that keeps defaulting to the
same directory
OK. Unfortunately I have not tried messing with font size in GnuCash on
Win 10. If GnuCash fonts are not roughly the same size as the rest of your
workspace, I think there is something in the gnucash folder in the start
menu to fiddle with. Otherwise the display font size should be adjusted.
I thought it defaulted to the last used location, but if not, investigate CUPS.
Open a browser and go to 127.0.0.1:631 or localhost:631 and there you can alter
printing system preferences.
Regards,
Adrien
> On Sep 4, 2019 w36d247, at 10:27 AM, Rich Shepard
> wrote:
>
> I've looked for a conf
I've looked for a config file where the default print-to-file directory is
specified so I can change it, but I cannot locate this file. Please point me
to it (on a linux system).
TIA,
Rich
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To updat
So the question remains, have you tried opening those exports yourself and with
what software? What software is your accountant using? (QuickBooks? since you
mentioned .qif) Did they try opening in a spreadsheet app?
Now, if I understand correctly, you are currently sending the HTML or PDF
copi
If you mean in Preferences > Accounting Period, I agree. I’m surprised this
hasn’t been fixed to ‘relative years’ yet. Certainly, filing a RFE (Request for
Enhancement) in Bugzilla would be in order. I would think a user would expect a
much more sane option to select the day/month and let the ye
And, yes, it would be more useful if it weren't set as either an
absolute date or "Previous Quarter"...
On 9/4/2019 8:08 PM, Christopher Lam wrote:
FWIW in the 4.x series it is planned to allow a book-specific
accounting-period, so, one can select (e.g. 30-June for Australia, 5-April
for UK, or
Of course, one can currently set the accounting period for the OS user
at Preferences->Accounting Period. ALthough not the same as per-book
settings, it is nonetheless a useful option for many.
On 9/4/2019 8:08 PM, Christopher Lam wrote:
FWIW in the 4.x series it is planned to allow a book-spe
FWIW in the 4.x series it is planned to allow a book-specific
accounting-period, so, one can select (e.g. 30-June for Australia, 5-April
for UK, or another arbitrary date) an eofy date, and reports should be able
to pick 'current-FY' or 'previous-FY' as report dates...
On Wed, 4 Sep 2019 at 13:56,
On Wed, 4 Sep 2019, Mike or Penny Novack wrote:
Just because you might end up printing an exported report does not mean
you have to send to your accountant as hard copy. Instead of printing the
file, simply attach it as a document to an email. Your accountant does not
need access to gnucash to r
On 9/4/2019 9:09 AM, Doug wrote:
Thanks Adrien. Every year I need to send my data to my accountant who does not
(yet) use Gnucash. I did not have any success exporting to .qif files: not sure
why. (Would not read into Quickbooks)
I thought a spreadsheet might be better way to go.
This is a n
Adrien,
one thing that would help in Australia is in the setup to be able to set the
year start as 1 July, & end as 30 June.
Currently the only options are the beginning of the year, monthly, quarterly,
or absolute.
I usually use absolute, resetting each year.
regards, Doug
On Wed, 4 Sep 20
Thanks Adrien. Every year I need to send my data to my accountant who does not
(yet) use Gnucash. I did not have any success exporting to .qif files: not sure
why. (Would not read into Quickbooks)
I thought a spreadsheet might be better way to go.
This is a new accountant because my last accoun
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