Setting aside the tone of Adrien's comments, I think that filing a bug report
against the Wayland project would be seriously misplaced. They're just
publishing a spec and a model implementaiton. The actual implementation for
Gnome is https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/mutter. KDE has a different co
A negative asset is effectively a liability. It is part of a concept
called 'contra' accounts. You can have contra-liability accounts too,
that are effectively assets.
Asset - normally a Debit balance - amount you own.
Contra-Asset - Credit balance - amount you owe someone else. (liability)
Li
On 7/12/22 5:18 PM, Eric Hammond wrote:
Revisiting the pre-paid invoice (coupon, credit note ...) issue:
In standard accounting a prepaid debt (aka a coupon, credit note, etc) is
booked as a liability.
On paper, and as direct import of transactions into GnuCash, this works
However, I abandoned
Hi,
one way I know works, but is a bit ugly, is to create your prepayment
account as a negative current asset. I do something similar as some members
of a club incur expenses on its behalf, which goes to their current account
as a negative asset, and I then use this to clear off invoices in their
RATS. I hate it when I proof a post but don't stop to think before
hitting 'send.'
My apologies to the GnuCash team, the moderator, and any readers of this
thread.
While I stand behind my comments, this is not the forum for such a
discussion. My sentiments aren't about 'using GnuCash' and do
For the simple reason they'll be annoyed and try to ignore the bug
report, I'd file it. You never know who else has the same problem with
various apps. Heck, I'd bet the bug is already filed, maybe even closed
as 'won't fix'. That's even better. File another and make them spend
their time marki
Revisiting the pre-paid invoice (coupon, credit note ...) issue:
In standard accounting a prepaid debt (aka a coupon, credit note, etc) is
booked as a liability.
On paper, and as direct import of transactions into GnuCash, this works
However, I abandoned the brute force transaction method since
Well, it is definitely a Wayland vs X11 issue. When I switched from Wayland
to X11, the problem just magically went away.
If I thought I stood a chance of being listened to there, I would file a
bug report against Wayland - but I suspect it wouldn't get much
traction.
Anyway, thanks, all, for
Yes, I was thinking about that as well. Ubuntu 20.04 shipped with X11 as
default, and 22.04 ships with Wayland as default. Maybe I will try changing
that and see what happens. I always felt more comfortable with X11, but
figured I would at least try Wayland, since they were making it the default
no
Hi
I think your issue is the windowing system on Debian which can be found
under setting/about, it probably states Wayland and not X11.
I have just checked my system and I am running X11 not Wayland which is
default on Debian distro's
To change that:
Log off
at the log on screen click the user
Another option is to create a new user and see if the behavior affects the new
user.
Ken Schneider
> On Jul 12, 2022, at 1:22 PM, Tracy wrote:
>
> Well, I haven't gotten very far in digging, but the fact that other people
> are not having the problem makes it that much more likely that it is
If Gnome is still using Tweaks, it might be buried in there, although I did
not see a specific setting in Ubuntu 20.04
On Tue, Jul 12, 2022 at 12:21 PM Tracy wrote:
> Well, I haven't gotten very far in digging, but the fact that other people
> are not having the problem makes it that much more l
Well, I haven't gotten very far in digging, but the fact that other people
are not having the problem makes it that much more likely that it is my
machine. If it wasn't such a pain to set everything back up afterwards, I
would just wipe the system and install fresh.
Meanwhile, I will keep looking
Hi David,
No issues for me.
I am running GS 4.11 on Ubuntu 22.04 and the windows stay in the same
place where I left them when I last closed GS
Regards,
Martin
On Tue, 2022-07-12 at 09:48 -0500, David Carlson wrote:
> Tracy,
>
> I would not like a desktop that did not remember where a window wa
If you need, you can split the expenditure between the Asset (affecting
the basis) and the Expense accounts.
The purpose of accounting is INFORMATION. That is what my "PS" was all
about. Thinking that you have to split the expenditure is an illusion.
You might want/need all of part of that
Hi,
On Tue, July 12, 2022 11:32 am, Tom Browder wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 12, 2022 at 09:38 Michael or Penny Novack <
> stepbystepf...@comcast.net> wrote:
>
[snip]
> Thanks, Michael. Yes, I understand the need for carefully determining,
> according to IRS rules, what is allowed for basis. But I'm not
On Tue, Jul 12, 2022 at 09:38 Michael or Penny Novack <
stepbystepf...@comcast.net> wrote:
> On 7/12/2022 9:01 AM, Derek Atkins wrote:
> > The way I do it personally (note: IANAA) is that I have an Assets:Fixed
> > Assets: account with subaccounts for, e.g. Purchase,
> > Renovations, etc.
> >
> >
Tracy,
I would not like a desktop that did not remember where a window was located
on the desktop/display combination when last used. Any other users seeing
similar issues?
On Tue, Jul 12, 2022 at 7:32 AM Tracy wrote:
> Hi David,
>
> Everything I can find says that Gnome (the desktop environme
On 7/12/2022 9:01 AM, Derek Atkins wrote:
The way I do it personally (note: IANAA) is that I have an Assets:Fixed
Assets: account with subaccounts for, e.g. Purchase,
Renovations, etc.
That way I account for improvements that change the basis, and the summed
balance of A:FA: is my current basis.
That looks similar to what I'm doing, except all of my data is on a
single line in the CSV file. The biggest problem seems to be how to
convince GnuCash to use 2 different commodities for the transaction
when importing from CSV.
On Tue, 2022-07-12 at 13:04 +1000, Geoff wrote:
> Hi Jon
>
> This i
On Tue, Jul 12, 2022 at 08:01 Derek Atkins wrote:
> The way I do it personally (note: IANAA) is that I have an Assets:Fixed
> Assets: account with subaccounts for, e.g. Purchase,
> Renovations, etc.
>
> That way I account for improvements that change the basis, and the summed
> balance of A:FA: i
The way I do it personally (note: IANAA) is that I have an Assets:Fixed
Assets: account with subaccounts for, e.g. Purchase,
Renovations, etc.
That way I account for improvements that change the basis, and the summed
balance of A:FA: is my current basis.
-derek
On Tue, July 12, 2022 8:38 am, To
I have looked at several accounting books and websites for an example of
accounting for an owner's personal residence and US fedral tax treatment
for improvements contributing to basis, but I haven't yet found a recipe
suitable for my lame level of bookkeeping knowledge.
Can anyone point to such a
Hi David,
Everything I can find says that Gnome (the desktop environment set up by
default in Ubuntu 22.04 - which was also the desktop environment used in
20.04, which worked as expected) does not save window placement
information. Instead, it is the responsibility of the application. Gnome
will
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