Clark Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> However, Quicken allows me to "split" a transaction -- for example, when I
> deposit my paycheck, I usually get some cash. I like to put the whole
> paycheck "in" under "Salary" and have an "out" of the cash-back amount, so
> that what goes into the "deposit" column for the transaction shows up as the
> "net deposit", which I can correlate to my statement at the end of the month,
> and still have the Salary correlate to what goes on my 1040 each year.
Multi-split transactions are directly supported by gnucash. I'm not
sure exactly what your question is... are you having trouble figuring
out how to enter multi-split transactions? If so, you need to make
sure you're in a "multi-split" display mode in the relevant account
register... either "multi-line", "auto single", or "auto double"
(under the resgister's Register/Style menu).
If that's not your question, could you clarify a bit what it is that
Quicken does that gnucash doesn't?
> A less important feature, but one who's absence is still annoying, is an
> "autonumber" -- in Quicken, in the "transaction number" column, I can just
> hit the 'n' key, and it will automatically give me the next number in the
> sequence.
Hit the "+" key in gnucash for the same function.
Thanks,
Bill Gribble
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