Apologies, (no edit on the mailing list), see
https://bugs.gnucash.org/show_bug.cgi?id=798987 - the previous link was the
multi-split bug fixed in V5.3.
On Thu, 29 Jun 2023 at 17:19, flywire wrote:
> I've submitted an updated working example with python code as an
> enhancement request for the i
I've submitted an updated working example with python code as an
enhancement request for the importer to:
https://bugs.gnucash.org/show_bug.cgi?id=798964
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This is a preliminary (spreadsheet) process to add GST splits to a bank
statement and use a multisplit csv file to import them to GnuCash.
1. Start with Bank Statement based on the Guide Checking Account -
see GST_Demo_Statement.csv
2. Accounts should exist for the transactions -
see
John,
Hmm, it's all irrelevant with Australian GST. Generally, a return is
submitted each quarter with GST collected less GST paid, and a payment is
made by the appropriate party for the difference. It doesn't matter if it
is income, a capital item, or stock.
With my experience of Quickbooks I se
> On Jun 20, 2023, at 00:11, flywire wrote:
>
>
> There is an incredible amount of keystrokes, clicks, and human memory
> recall to pay a bill:
>
> Business, Vendor, New Bill, Date Opened:20/06/2023, Vendor: Random, OK
> Expense account: Expenses:Auto:Fuel, Quantity: 1, Taxable, Tax included
On Tue, 20 Jun 2023 17:11:59 +1000
flywire wrote:
> There is an incredible amount of keystrokes, clicks, and human memory
> recall to pay a bill:
That would be a reason I don't use that part of the business features.
For invoicing I use the business features as it is worthwhile, even
when I get
On Tue, 20 Jun 2023 at 10:58, David Cousens
wrote:
> AFAIK the tax tables work only with with invoices. As not all items are
> necessarily subject to GST in all business situations in AU. It would be
> difficult to automate it because of this and similarly with applying it to
> imported transacti
ck
Sent: Sunday, June 18, 2023 9:49 PM
To: gnucash-user@gnucash.org
Subject: Re: [GNC] automatically account for gst on random purchases
On 6/18/2023 7:43 PM, flywire wrote:
>> In looking for/expecting and automated solution you are thinking one
>> should
> be reasonable. ...I l
https://lists.gnucash.org/pipermail/gnucash-user/2023-June/107406.html
David Cousens wrote:
> If you look at this section of the business features setting up tax
tables is described.
https://www.gnucash.org/docs/v4/C/gnucash-guide/bus_setup.html It works for
invoices and should work similarly for b
On 2023-06-18 18:48, Michael or Penny Novack wrote:
> Notice that "point" in "point of sales. That's because the correct tax
> amount depends on the point of sale (the where).
Well, sometimes. In California, for example, the sales tax rate on
purchase of a vehicle is according to where the new own
On 6/18/2023 7:43 PM, flywire wrote:
In looking for/expecting and automated solution you are thinking one should
be reasonable. ...I live in the US [which has complex GST]
Yet surely it is reasonable for the automated GST functionality for accrual
accounting to apply to cash accounting. Even US
> In looking for/expecting and automated solution you are thinking one should
be reasonable. ...I live in the US [which has complex GST]
Yet surely it is reasonable for the automated GST functionality for accrual
accounting to apply to cash accounting. Even USA GST has rules, so it could
be automa
And to hammer another nail into Michael's point, the tax rate can vary
by date. For example, when I lived in New York state it had a 4% sales
tax rate, including on clothing, _except_ for certain weekends each
year, when clothing below a certain value was taxed at 0% but other
taxable goods were st
On 6/18/2023 9:14 AM, Brad Morrison wrote:
Thanks flywire!
That GitHub Pull Request link takes me to a comment from John Ralls
that very succinctly summarizes the difficulties of using GnuCash for
larger or more complex enterprises.
The rest of that comment is: "Adding those modules is a non
On 6/17/2023 10:06 PM, Karl May wrote:
Hi all,
For my business setup I am wondering whether there is a way to automatically
account for gst on small random purchases (e.g. hotel, restaurant etc.).
...
Any suggestions how this can be automated such that the default is a
transaction spli
Thanks flywire!
That GitHub Pull Request link takes me to a comment from John Ralls that
very succinctly summarizes the difficulties of using GnuCash for larger
or more complex enterprises.
The rest of that comment is: "Adding those modules is a non-starter:
Consider that it's been 10 years
https://github.com/Gnucash/gnucash/pull/1623#issuecomment-1583966278
"GnuCash is for tiny and simple enterprises; we often say individuals and
sole proprietorships. Even having employees makes using GnuCash a dubious
proposition (no payroll module), as does carrying more than a very few line
items
On Sunday, 18 June 2023 03:06:28 BST Karl May wrote:
>
> Any suggestions how this can be automated such that the default is a
> transaction split and application of a default GST rate?
>
> Thanks
>
Hi Karl,
If your "random" transactions are mostly from a regular set of suppliers, then
I trul
Karl,
If you look at this section of the business features setting up tax tables is
described. https://www.gnucash.org/docs/v4/C/gnucash-guide/bus_setup.html It
works for invoices and should work similarly for bills. That is as automated as
it gets.
David Cousens
On Sun, 2023-06-18 at 12:06 +10
For the work you're doing, it seems that importing transactions isn't
benefiting you very much, as you still have to go through each one
manually. I would just enter everything manually, and do regular balancing
of the "bank account".
I doubt if it can be automated in GnuCash - there isn't anythi
Hi all,
For my business setup I am wondering whether there is a way to automatically
account for gst on small random purchases (e.g. hotel, restaurant etc.).
My current setup is roughly
Assets:financial_assets:bank_account
Assets:financial_assets:gst
Expense:travel
So far I haven't setup Accou
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