I guess I’d have to see what QuickBooks is offering auditors then, short of an 
accountant’s copy of the file. (I have a client that uses it so I could 
investigate, but I can’t promise anything right away)

Until then, I’d go the route of a Transaction Report. Play around with that to 
see if it gets you something like what you need. It has extensive sorting 
abilities. (check the Sort tab of Options)

With it, you can craft a report that includes every account, sorted by account, 
and then by date, showing all transactions from the opening balance to the 
closing date of the audit trail.

That’s the best I can think of at the moment.

If you have some issues getting something ‘just so’ with the report, let us 
know here and we’ll see if we can help.

Regards,
Adrien

> On Mar 17, 2020 w12d77, at 10:50 PM, Adrian Yong 
> <adrianyong.88p...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi Adrien,
> 
> Thanks for your very detailed explanation...
> 
> I appreciate that we enter each transaction using the double entry system 
> into the accounts.. This is almost the same as manual accounting.
> 
> The problem arises when the auditors do not use Gnucash. In the manual 
> system, the auditors will be provided with a General Ledger which is a 
> collation of all transactions sorted into each of the accounts.
> 
> If the auditors uses Gnucash, all I need to do is to furnish them with 
> gnucash data file and my problem would vanish... But....
> 
> Regards,
> Adrian

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