Nice find!
I don’t think you can ditch the last ‘Actual’ from within GnuCash, that will
have to be in a spreadsheet.
But the column may be useful if you enter future transactions. I know this
sounds odd, but it can be helpful, especially with such a report, to show
‘planned’ transactions that
Updating did the trick. I played with the date options and tried something
counter-intuitive that worked nicely and may be of interest to others: I
set "start" to "Next" and "end" to "Current" (and also unchecked "Show
Totals" on the Display tab). This produces a report with "budget vs actual
to
I see that my version is older than I thought. I will try updating
gnucash. Hope nothing breaks.
:-)Rob
On Wed, Sep 19, 2018 at 5:33 PM Adrien Monteleone <
adrien.montele...@lusfiber.net> wrote:
> Rob,
>
> The options for the budget report do allow you to choose which periods you
> want to
Adrien,
Thanks for the quick response. However, I'm still stumped. You are
referring to the General tab of the "Budget Report" pop-up window that
appears when you hit the Options button when the report is open - right?
(If not please elaborate.) As I explained (incompletely) in my message,
ther
Rob,
The options for the budget report do allow you to choose which periods you want
to report for. (at least as of v3.2)
Look at the General tab starting with the Range checkbox.
You could say, run the report for July, August, September (Q3) add the Total
and Difference columns (from the Disp
I've created a budget by month, and want to produce a budget vs actual
report for "year to date" (accumulated). The default report has each month
in a separate column and shows the whole year. The Options pop-up does not
include a way to modify the dates for the report. I've looked at the file
"b