Again, no tax advice here, but I tend to look for a reporting form
that goes to some kind of governmental unit, and then I check the tax
software (I use CCH) for some checkbox or other items for "loss
payouts", "insurance loss payments", etc. It might be something for
form 4868. But that's not ad
> On Sep 16, 2019, at 3:51 PM, ihf wrote:
>
> As of v 3.7, if you find an account by beginning to type its name and then
> hit Enter, the account used to open but no longer does. Also, if you begin
> typing a name and use backspace to correct your entry, it no longer works
> (nothing happens).
On 9/16/19 5:38 PM, orn...@tutanota.com wrote:
> Are insurance proceeds income? If not, how do you characterize an insurance
> payout when they send you a check?
The real question is "Is it taxable?" to which the answer varies
according to your taxing authority.
I have always considered it "inc
You need to ask that of a local CPA. Every jurisdiction will be different.
They will tell you the proper accounts to use for your specific situation.
We can help once you know those accounts if you still have questions, but any
more info from this list would be dispensing accounting/tax advice,
Uttam,
From the list site, simply right-click and ‘copy link’ for the link next to the
senders name at the top of the message. (just under the subject line and to the
right of their name)
This is a properly formed mailto link that is addressed only to the list, with
the subject line already in
Amex is encrypting (tokenizing?) the account number now. So you have to
determine what your account number is. I downloaded a QFX file from their
website. reveals the encrypted account number. I don't know if
this sort of account number gets rotated every so often so I am not saying
this is "th
Are insurance proceeds income? If not, how do you characterize an insurance
payout when they send you a check?
I've seen a reference online to using accounts receivable against lowered value
of inventory, but that approach doesn't seem to apply to a homeowner who has
storm damage or a fire.
My apologies for the bump. Thank you Liz and thank you John for being
patient with me.
Also, I may have made a mess of sending this message as I'm struggling
with the 'technology' i.e. I'm notified by the digest, I then visit
https://lists.gnucash.org/pipermail/gnucash-user/2019-September/087
As of v 3.7, if you find an account by beginning to type its name and then
hit Enter, the account used to open but no longer does. Also, if you begin
typing a name and use backspace to correct your entry, it no longer works
(nothing happens).
--
Sent from: http://gnucash.1415818.n4.nabble.com/Gn
> For example, ... if you paid with the credit card would be db expense; cr
> credit card.
>
> Then when you pay against credit card charges might be:
> 1) balance paid in full, no interest - db credit card; cr checking
> ...
> Michael D Novack
>
>
Possible duplicate.
Thank you, Mike. I'
> For example, ... if you paid with the credit card would be db expense; cr
> credit card.
>
> Then when you pay against credit card charges might be:
> 1) balance paid in full, no interest - db credit card; cr checking
> ...
>
> Michael D Novack
>
>
>
Michael,
Thank you. I'm enjoying th
> On Sep 16, 2019, at 2:31 AM, Liz wrote:
>
> On Mon, 16 Sep 2019 10:25:14 +0100
> Uttam Chakravorty wrote:
>
>> Bump?
>
> Have you considered answering Geert's question?
>
> I'm the moderator, and I dislike "bump" as a tactic, less so if you
> haven't answered questions directed to you.
>
On 2019-09-16 08:54, Mike or Penny Novack wrote:
> On 9/15/2019 10:01 PM, Peter West wrote:
>> . That means that increases in an Asset are debits, while decreases
>> are credits; and increases in Liabilities (or Equity) are credits,
>> while decreases are debits.
>>
>> Income increases assets;
On 9/15/2019 10:01 PM, Peter West wrote:
. That means that increases in an Asset are debits, while decreases are
credits; and increases in Liabilities (or Equity) are credits, while decreases
are debits.
Income increases assets; an increase in an asset is a debit; therefore the
balancing entr
On 9/15/2019 7:03 PM, David Carlson wrote:
I think other GnuCash users often resort to spreadsheets or other software
when the GnuCash reports don't meet their needs.
David Carlson
OR additional sets of books (virtual books, etc. )
Using this sort of entity as an example, suppose a church/no
Ok thanks. I'll take a look at it.
On Sun, Sep 15, 2019 at 5:16 PM David Cousens
wrote:
> Daniel
>
> The updated documentation on import matching is available
> https://www.dropbox.com/sh/k0vy82he9g46wdc/AADfnttumgC71eZfJWGHfRuDa?dl=0
> here. If you point your browser at the file help.html it wi
David,
Thanks so much for all the detailed information and help. I did read "The
Basics" and some of the other Help Documentation. But then I got impatient
and wanted to try something. Another problem, I suppose, is that I have no
accounting background whatsoever. You're right I should have starte
On Mon, 16 Sep 2019 10:25:14 +0100
Uttam Chakravorty wrote:
> Bump?
Have you considered answering Geert's question?
I'm the moderator, and I dislike "bump" as a tactic, less so if you
haven't answered questions directed to you.
Liz
___
gnucash-user
Bump?
On 13/09/2019 20:18, Geert Janssens wrote:
Op vrijdag 13 september 2019 20:50:35 CEST schreef Uttam Chakravorty:
Firstly I apologise if I should be trying something other than posting
here. If so, any guidance would be appreciated.
I'm running Gnucash on Ubuntu 18.04 desktop to look aft
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