Hi,
On Mon, November 22, 2021 10:43 pm, D. via gnucash-user wrote:
> Seems to me a bad design decision to allow a user to have UI access to
> change things one way, but not the other. It is also bad user design to
> allow users to change things in an account that will always break when the
> user
Op dinsdag 23 november 2021 14:27:49 CET schreef Derek Atkins:
> Cross that with the lack of a display-only cell type. There is data we
> want to show (I/P/?) but really don't want to allow the user to edit it --
> but there's not a data cell that *does* that.
>
Probably we're closer to that cell
Work flow using two pass for the CSV importer (for that fact any importer)
yields better result for me as well, generally speaking. This is probably
best way to handle double-entry accounting. In the first pass I import new
or update existing transactions into register for one side of the transfer
Hello
I've just installed GNUCash to use instead of Quickbooks. Their
intransigence about not being able to verify an installation of QuickBooks
2010 on a different computer when the old one has crashed has forced me to
move.
I use Quickbooks to do the accounts for a very small not-for-profit
com
On Tue, 23 Nov 2021 12:01:35 +1100
"Chris Trueman" wrote:
> I can't see a way to print a receipt with GNUCash.
>
> Am I missing something?
I used to print out a customer report, which while not purely a
receipt, indicated the amount of the bill, the amount paid, and the
amount owing.
Others may