I have almost no knowledge of the internal of Gnucash, so I can be completly wrong. I want to use the engine, I don't want to bypass it. I believe I used a wrong vocabulary. Let me explain again... What I wish I could do is to communicate with the engine using xml-rpc. Thus, I would have a method i would call through xml-rpc and ask for the last 30 transactions, and the call will return with the last 30 transactions.
Does it make sense ? I think there is not much work, it's basicaly encapsulating the calls to the engine in xml-rpc methods... I was thinking of a script starting an xml-rpc enable engine and then starting a KDE front-end to connect to it. Everything should shutdown itself, then it would be transparent for the client. Fred. On Monday 17 March 2003 06:10 pm, Linas Vepstas wrote: > On Mon, Mar 17, 2003 at 05:54:24PM -0600, Fred was heard to remark: > > This is what I'm looking at. > > I read in the archive some discussions about the rpc back-end. > > I also saw some code in src/experimental/cgi-bin (or something like > > that). > > > > I will come up with a proposal of xml-rpc methods, client oriented (as > > opposed to Gnucash engine oriented). > > I think you misunderstand what the engine is. The engine is supposed > to provide a common API for both a client and a hypothetical server. > > The whole point of the engine is to be able to say, in very simple > terms, > > 'open this file and read it' > or 'open this db and read it' > or 'open this rpc server and read it' > > then > 'get me all transactions since july' > or 'give me the last 30 transactions' > > and then > > while (trans) { > date = xacctransactionGetDate (trans); > amt = xaccTransactionGetAmount (trans); > txt = xaccTransactionGetDescription (trans); > gui_display (date, txt, amt); > } > > The idea behind the engine is that you only need to write the > 'gui_display' routine; the engine does the rest. > > > I will gaurentee you that if you don't use the engine, then you will > reinvent it. If you aren't aware that you are reinventing it, then you > will reinvent it badly. > > If you want to reinvent the engine, that's OK, as long as you are aware > that is what you are doing, and that you have a stated design goal (e.g > make it slimmer/smaller/more memory efficient) and work to that. > > --linas _______________________________________________ gnucash-devel mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.gnucash.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-devel