Well within the regular register there's no mechanism for inputting, e.g.
$40 electricity paid and have the system allocate among splits according to
a formula.
There's however a mechanism for inputting in a Scheduled Transaction (known
as SX), e.g. let's say 50% use is personal and 50% is busines
Carlos,
If you have a lot of securities in your file it might be easier to create a
new test file with just one security present. It would not even need to be
one you own. :-)
David C
On Jan 1, 2018 10:26 PM, "John Ralls" wrote:
> Try disabling price retrieval on all but one stock, one that y
click on the 'Accounts' tab,
click on 'View' in the menu bar, select 'Filter By' from the drop down menu,
on the popup menu, click on the 'Other' tab,
select 'Show hidden accounts' and click 'Ok"
and you're done!
On 1/1/2018 9:33 AM, tom9...@earthlink.net wrote:
Last year I edited an ac
David / John,
I have just one saving account in U$S. There are not others
securities/commodities.
The same file opened in Windows works perfect (with just one currency
to check/update USD to ARS).
I checked that Alphavantage key is correct in Linux (in Windows too).
The F::Q ve
Larry,
I'm not familiar with the details of RRSP accounts in Canada so any comments
here are general in nature and not taken as accounting advice per se.
If it is a retirement savings account you would treat it as an Asset.
Depending upon the conditions associated with withdrawal of funds from
The remaining unanswered question, which I think is part of the original
question, is what to do about withdrawals being treated as taxable income?
For those in the US, an RRSP is roughly equivalent to an (non-Roth) IRA.
Contributions are tax deductible, earnings are tax-deferred; withdrawals a
Hi,
Last year I treated the RRSP as an asset and contributions as transfers from a
Savings Account to the RRSP account. I think this is in line with what Dave is
saying.
Although as you say contributions are tax deductible, earnings are
tax-deferred; withdrawals are taxable I am not especially
I kind of like your approach - thus far I’ve tracked my retirement accounts
outside of GnuCash, which is similar. The only pitfall I can see is if your
gnucash file gets at all large, the time it takes to open a file gets long.
And having multiple files means the file-open delay whenever you s
Larry
If your withdrawals from the RRSP are taxable on withdrawal then I think
your approach of using two files recording transfers to your bank account
from the RRSP as Expenses in the RRSP account and Income in your main
accounts should work fine as it will satisfy the accounting equation in b
Victor, Dave,
Thanks for your help. At this point my file is not very large and my new RRSP
file will be quite small, so I think I will give this approach a try.
Larry
On 01/02/18 06:08 PM, "R. Victor Klassen" wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> I kind of like your approach - thus far I’ve tracked my re
On 02/01/18 06:52 PM, DaveC49 wrote:
Larry
If your withdrawals from the RRSP are taxable on withdrawal then I think
your approach of using two files recording transfers to your bank account
from the RRSP as Expenses in the RRSP account and Income in your main
accounts should work fine as it wil
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