William Moore wrote
> Is there something I can do to remove this column? Currently I have to
> export the report and edit the html to get a presentable report.
I notice this bug has not yet been corrected yet. A simple workaround is to
create an empty trading account in your list of accounts, you
Hi All
After many years of trying to hack scheme, I've finally been able to create
a custom report building on previous efforts by Doug Doughty. Report is
accessible in Report > Business > BAS/VAT Report.
I attach .scm file to be loaded into ~/.gnucash/config.user as usual, and
an example report
New user/installation on RaspberryPi.
When I select Help/Tutorial and Concepts Guide, I get the message:
"GnuCash could not find the files for the help documentation. This is
likely because the 'gnucash-docs' package is not installed."
dpkg --list | grep gnucash reports:
ii gnucash 1:2.6.4-3 arm
Mike,
mike.m...@gmx.net writes:
>[If you don't mind me saying this: I haven't seen mailman lists for
>quite some years and I was a little surprised to see they still exist.
>I could not find any way how to add another comment to a given thread,
>despite having started the thread m
This reminds me of an earlier question from a user in Sweden.
Apparently governments (Sweden in that case, the UK in this one) are
getting into the habit of specifying not only acceptable tax software
but also accounting software. The UK has not yet required businesses
of a certain size to use spe
My home Wi-Fi has suddenly developed a bad case of dropouts in spite of a
very strong signal. Several times a day various devices need to reconnect.
With that background, if GnuCash is in the process of saving the data file
(over Wi-Fi) when the dropout happens, GnuCash appears to hang and my
Win
My suggestion is to save the file locally first and then copy it to your file
server.
Ken Schneider
> On Jul 31, 2017, at 3:44 PM, David Carlson
> wrote:
>
> My home Wi-Fi has suddenly developed a bad case of dropouts in spite of a
> very strong signal. Several times a day various devices n
I am seeking guidance on methods to track items such as gift cards, gift
certificates, merchant cards, bank reward cards, and store-credit cards for
returned purchases.
On the one hand, these items are a form of income. As such, I could track them
as income.
On the other hand, I use these ite
I track gift cards as assets, under Current Assets
On Mon, Jul 31, 2017 at 4:24 PM, Paul W. wrote:
> I am seeking guidance on methods to track items such as gift cards, gift
> certificates, merchant cards, bank reward cards, and store-credit cards
> for returned purchases.
>
> On the one hand,
Here's an example from my experience:
I purchased some new appliances for my kitchen and received a gift card in
return.
The value of the gift card became a new Asset:Gift-Card that I balanced
against a reduction in my existing Expenses:Appliances. So the net of
Expenses:Appliances showed me what
All those cards represent something that you own and can convert into stuff
of value. As such, they are assets, much like cash. They are not, in and of
themselves income, any more than cash is. They are not your liabilities,
which makes them different than credit cards, and should not be tracked
th
The gift card is clearly an asset. When you receive it it is income. In most
jurisdictions one would expect gift income to be not taxable however this
may not always be the case.
I generally have income streams that are both taxable and non-taxable so I
already have placeholder subaccounts of Inco
On 7/31/2017 4:24 PM, Paul W. wrote:
On the one hand, these items are a form of income. As such, I could track them
as income.
On the other hand, I use these items they way I use a credit card to make
purchases. As such, I could track them as a credit card.
Are there other hands with other
> On Jul 26, 2017, at 10:27 PM, AC wrote:
>
> I'm going to try
> the structure in a new file and see how it behaves. If everything looks
> ok then I'll recreate the structure in my main file and start entering
> the data.
For what it’s worth, I’ve been doing it that way for years and it’s worke
Hi Morris,
On Linux Mint 18.2 the help files are located in
/usr/share/docs/gnucash-docs. The display of the tutorial guide and manual
by Gnucash uses the gnome Yelp help browser. It may be this is not installed
in the raspberryPi Linux version.
http://archive.linuxfromscratch.org/blfs-museum/sna
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