Hello,
Thank you so much for helping me, guys.
I knew that, it's depend on my local. I just want to know cash flow for that
problems in GnuCash.
I had read some post after read your comment, and i see that, maybe i will
not follow what you told me.
You guys doing the same ways. Create the Liabilit
> On 20 Mar 2020, at 00:55, John Ralls wrote:
>
> Michael,
>
> Found, fixed, and pushed. Thanks for reporting it.
>
> Regards,
> John Ralls
Thanks for your prompt attention to an issue which probably only affected me.
Michael
___
gnucash-user maili
Scenario:
Report 1: Balance Sheet 2017
Report 2: Balance Sheet 2018
Report 3: Balance Sheet 2019
Create Multicolumn Balance Sheet which includes these three reports.
This behaves as expected.
Edit Report 1 - let’s say to omit the links to accounts.
Run Multicolumn Report again - no change in o
On 3/20/2020 3:27 AM, Long wrote:
Hello,
Thank you so much for helping me, guys.
I knew that, it's depend on my local. I just want to know cash flow for that
problems in GnuCash.
I had read some post after read your comment, and i see that, maybe i will
not follow what you told me.
You guys doin
Your answer demonstrates precisely why you need local professional advice. They
can explain it for you based on your specific situation.
Regards,
Adrien
> On Mar 20, 2020 w12d80, at 2:27 AM, Long wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> Thank you so much for helping me, guys.
> I knew that, it's depend on my lo
From your explanation, it appears you’re taking 3 saved configurations and
putting them into one multicolumn, correct?
Did you try the Balance Sheet (multicolumn) in the experimental menu? (v3.8)
I was just able to easily run such a report with 2017, 2018, 2019 and then
turned off links with no
> On 20 Mar 2020, at 15:33, Adrien Monteleone
> wrote:
>
> From your explanation, it appears you’re taking 3 saved configurations and
> putting them into one multicolumn, correct?
That’s correct - this is the “official” (as opposed to “experimental”) method.
I think my original multicolumn sh
> On Mar 20, 2020 w12d80, at 12:01 PM, Michael Hendry
> wrote:
>
>
> I haven’t looked into it thoroughly, but I don’t think there is an equivalent
> “experimental” report for Revenue & Expenditure, which would provide the same
> look-and-feel as the experimental multicolumn balance sheet, so
> On 20 Mar 2020, at 17:05, Adrien Monteleone
> wrote:
>
>
>> On Mar 20, 2020 w12d80, at 12:01 PM, Michael Hendry
>> wrote:
>>
>>
>> I haven’t looked into it thoroughly, but I don’t think there is an
>> equivalent “experimental” report for Revenue & Expenditure, which would
>> provide the
Yep, nomenclature is always an issue. In this case, a relatively recent
historical confounding interchange of the terms ‘income’ and ‘revenue’ can lead
to some not realizing that report also includes expenses.
I think ‘Income Statement’ is the traditional name of the report, at least that
is w
Long, Michael, David, Adrien --
I think the question was a good one, and that it has been answered, despite
Long's last post suggesting it was not answered. The brief version of
answer: if you want to use your accounting system to recognize your tax
liability at the same time you recognize incom
Long,
I think you are misunderstanding. Cash flow is a different concept from
making provision for liabilities which will arise in the future. Having done
the latter may however help ensure that your cash flow in the future is
sufficient to meet your liabilities in the future. It is complicated f
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