I just got the mail that my proposal was accepted to GSOC 2012. Thanks to the mentors and the community for the support through the application process.
I am looking forward to the coding work ahead. Cheers, Ngewi On Tue, Apr 10, 2012 at 22:57, John Ralls <[email protected]> wrote: > > On Apr 10, 2012, at 1:17 PM, Christian Stimming wrote: > > > Am Dienstag, 10. April 2012, 01:36:56 schrieb Ngewi Fet: > >> After doing a crash course in QFX, I have written a small module for > >> outputting expenses in the OFX format which was proposed as a better > >> alternative to the QIF format. > >> The code can be found here: https://github.com/codinguser/OfxModule > >> > >> I am grateful for any feedback. > > > > This is very good! The code looks clean, with a sufficiently detailed > > architecture to actually see the working code and producing valid OFX. > > Obviously you have some good experience with Android Java programming! > The way > > you are re-using the existing frameworks (e.g. Java Arraylist, > org.w3c.dom, > > and javax.xml Transformer) is very good. > > > > After seeing that code, I would strongly recommend to write the expense > > tracker in Android Java, as you initially proposed. It seems to me you > will be > > able to get some usable Android prototype running very quickly. You > should > > then be able to ensure that the interfacing between the Android app and > the > > actual gnucash data file works really well. With this code example, I'd > say > > you have a very very high chance to succeed with your complete proposal! > > Thanks a lot. > > Christian, > > I took the liberty of copying the first paragraph to a comment on Ngewi's > proposal for the benefit of the Gnome folks. I hope you don't mind. > > Regards, > John Ralls > > _______________________________________________ gnucash-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-devel
