Hello, I moved from my home country about 4 months ago and did keep track of
expenses from the day that I left. Would now like to start tracking again using
the program but wondering what would be the most practical way to begin again.
If starting from a clean slate, how can I keep the same
Hello,
I purchased a new PC computer (w/Windows 10) and had the computer shop where I
purchased it, transfer my data to the new computer. I download the latest
version 4.8a but can't get the computer to recognize the data.
I found some gnucash files in my file manager and dragged and dropped
dified last (you can compare their modified dates for that).
Regards,
Geert
Op vrijdag 28 februari 2020 21:11:58 CET schreef LEO BOLTA:
> Hi Geert,
> Thanks for going to the trouble to load the 2.6.21 to confirm that that
> version would not generate the Expense Stacked Bar Graph an
without support. The 2.6 series is not seeing
any updates any more.
As for the 3.8 upgrade path, I don't find any details on what went wrong in
your previous messages. Can you give more details ?
Regards,
Geert
Op woensdag 26 februari 2020 20:02:32 CET schreef LEO BOLTA:
> Hello Geert,I tried
Hello Geert,I tried to follow the path of instructions from the link that you
provided and found this trace file which appear to record errors so hope this
is relevant to resolving the problem of generating the stacked bar, expense
report.Thank you,Leo
p.s. My plan is to correct my current
s would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Leo
On Tuesday, February 25, 2020, 6:25:05 p.m. EST, Robert Heller
wrote:
At Tue, 25 Feb 2020 21:19:01 + (UTC) LEO BOLTA wrote:
>
> Greetings,
> I could not get the latest 3.8 update to work at all, so had to uninstall and
> go back t
Greetings,
I could not get the latest 3.8 update to work at all, so had to uninstall and
go back to the earlier stable version of 2.6.21. Unfortunately, I don't recall
the version that I was using before trying to upgrade to the latest but I
believe it was possibly 2.6.18? The version 2.6.21
, 2018, at 11:27 PM, Leo Bolta wrote:
How would one handle a transaction of inherited cash in GnuCash within Canada?
Can I expect to be paying taxes on the sum in the future?
Thanks,
Leo
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How would one handle a transaction of inherited cash in GnuCash within
Canada? Can I expect to be paying taxes on the sum in the future?
Thanks,
Leo
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: March-03-18 4:45 AM
To: gnucash-u...@lists.gnucash.org
Subject: Re: General Ledger
On 02/03/2018 16:22, Leo Bolta wrote:
> Not to keep the thread alive but these are photos of select pages of
> the
> 1882 High School bookkeeping text book, I referred to earlier and
> promised to distribu
I never majored in accounting but I can still remember "General Journal"
being a standard term often used in Canadian high school accounting about 50
years ago. Recently I picked up an Ontario, Canada bookkeeping text book
from 1882. It makes a distinction between what are called "Day Books,
me account.
The only 'traditional' report you should see Unrealized Gains on, is the
Balance Sheet in the Equity section.
Regards,
Adrien
> On Jun 25, 2017, at 9:13 AM, Leo Bolta <lbo...@rogers.com> wrote:
>
>
> Although I understand it does not seem to be standard acc
017, at 7:13 PM, Leo Bolta <lbo...@rogers.com> wrote:
>
>
> Although I understand it does not seem to be standard accounting
> practice to track appreciation on a condo which is a principal
> residence, I can't help but want to implement incorporating very
> conservative p
Although I understand it does not seem to be standard accounting practice to
track appreciation on a condo which is a principal residence, I can't help
but want to implement incorporating very conservative periodic values into
GnuCash, possibly as much as twice a year as the condo represents a
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