Not if I can not have the denomimator for the same currency different in different accounts. Electronic transfers are still done in AUD$0.01. Thus if I pay a fuel bill of $23.47 it will cost $23.47 if I pay with credit and $23.45 if I pay cash.
Derek Atkins wrote: > What happens if you just change the (AUD$) currency so that the > denominator is e.g. 20 instead of 100? Does that do the right thing? > > -derek > > Conrad Canterford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > > All, > > > > In Australia, physical cash (actual notes and coins) are limited to > > multiples of $0.05 by virtue of the fact that we have no 1c or 2c coins > > anymore. I'm sure a similar situation happens in other places. > > > > This proposal is to implement a warning on certain accounts when those > > accounts are not an exact multiple of the constraint. There are a couple > > of ways this can be implemented: > > > > 1. As an option to particular currencies, but only effective on > > accounts of type "Cash". This would mean that, if the currency has a > > constraint associated with it, any "Cash" account in that currency will > > display a warning if an amount is not a multiple of the constraint. > > 2. On a per-account basis, with a multiple as an account option. This > > would enable it to be applied to any accounts regardless of currency as > > a user-setable option. > > > > Option 2 is more general, but also a little fiddlier to implement. > > Option 1 satisfies all my requirements, but if Option 2 is preferred > > than that would be the better solution. > > > > What do people think? Would either 1 or 2 be useful? What other > > currencies might this apply to? > > > > Your comments please (either to the list or me directly). _______________________________________________ gnucash-devel mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.gnumatic.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-devel