On 2024-06-13 14:04, John Ralls wrote:
> The one thing we can’t do is pagination, it’s not something that HTML is
> capable of.
HTML as such, you're correct. But CSS is capable of formatting pages,
though my attempts in non-GnuCash contexts didn't come out well.
Stan Brown
Tehachapi, CA, USA
htt
Have you explored Reports>Assets & Liabilities>General Ledger? It’s pretty
thoroughly configurable, I’d think you can get almost everything you want out
of it. The one thing we can’t do is pagination, it’s not something that HTML is
capable of.
Regards,
John Ralls
> On Jun 1
I would like to echo Bruce's request for a General Ledger report. This is
incredibly useful when trying to trace what's happened when things go wrong
or reports give results you don't expect.
Bruce, you're right, when using T-tables with pencil and paper, the totals
are at the
Are you referring to the window that we call the Accounts window rather
than the General Journal register window that many also call the General
Ledger?
That indeed is a mystery but you might check the View settings to be sure
that all accounts are selected to be shown, including Zero value and
I am using an account list in general use in Sweden, such that account
number 8400 is a holding number for accounts for interest payments from
the entity being recorded. I can not get account 8400 to appear in the
general ledger although two subaccounts, 8422, interest payments to
suppliers
ixed to Transaction Journal mode)
Regards,
Adrien
On 6/9/21 10:57 AM, Toby O wrote:
Hi,
I don't see the descriptions from the Invoice / Bill section on the General
Ledger section.
So for example I'll have a Bill with Description as follows :-
Black Box
When I go look at the general
If I remember correctly the General ledger only shows the last 30 days of
transactions. You
can use Edit->Filter by... to change that.
Regards,
Geert
Op vrijdag 5 november 2021 16:22:14 CET schreef Sharon Sydnor:
> Gyle, yes thank you I considered that and did set the correct start a
On 11/5/2021 11:22 AM, Sharon Sydnor wrote:
Gyle, yes thank you I considered that and did set the correct start and end
dates and also thought to look to the PREFERENCES of the entire program and
there is a place there to also set the start and end dates and select if they
are RELATIVE or ABSO
it back to Dec 31 of the
required year.
Sharon
Sent from my iPhone
> On Nov 4, 2021, at 10:17 PM, Adrian Yong wrote:
>
>
> Hi All,
>
> I have raised this detail before...
>
> It was explained to me that the normal General Ledger which classified
&g
Hi All,
I have raised this detail before...
It was explained to me that the normal General Ledger which classified
Assets, Liabilities, and Proprietorship with their total amounts so that
the auditor can be sure that A = L + P is observed but GNUCash works on a
double entry system so A = L + P
Gyle McCollam
609.680.2326 Mobile
gmccol...@live.com<mailto:gmccol...@gyleshomes.com> email
From: gnucash-user on
behalf of sydnorbill...@bellsouth.net
Sent: Thursday, November 4, 2021 7:05 PM
To: gnucash-user@gnucash.org
Subject:
Relative newbie, even though using gnucash for four years, but only use it
once a year to prepare for tax filing and by the next time filing comes
around the following year I forget a lot of how it worked.
In trying to print out a General Ledger report, after selecting reports and
General
Hi,
I don't see the descriptions from the Invoice / Bill section on the General
Ledger section.
So for example I'll have a Bill with Description as follows :-
Black Box
When I go look at the general ledger, there is no description. It is just
blank. This has me very puzzled and conf
That’s probably a different issue entirely.
I just ran the General Ledger Report, and used both ‘Export' (which is HTML)
and ‘Make PDF’ both of which worked fine without extra blank pages. (I’m now on
3.906 on MacOS 10.15.5) I haven’t yet jumped to 4.x but will tonight. I’ll see
if I can
The file does contain CSV data. The extension doesn’t change that. It affects
how *some* operating systems detect that fact.
By all means, file an RFE.
The present method is the most versatile for *all* users. It does require the
user to know some basics of their computer though.
There’s a val
When a GNUcash user requests that data be exported to an “CSV” file the
expectation is that the file contents will indeed contain “CSV” data. Therefore
I see no reason for omitting the “.csv” file extension.
Just my 2¢
Ken Schneider
> On Mar 30, 2020, at 12:15 PM, Adrien Monteleone
> wrote:
I hadn’t noticed since most of my files have extensions anyway, but indeed, I
just tested a markdown file by removing the extension. It changed the
association from Atom to TextEdit, but couldn’t open it. (Something about UTF-8
not being applicable. ?? Really ?? Opening with Atom worked fine tho
On 3/29/2020 7:12 PM, Adrian Yong wrote:
Hi Michael,
*_Your Point No. 5 is interesting._*
Gnucash's instruction is Export X to csv. One would be led to
believe that the file type is automatically csv. But in reality, you
are saying that it can export to any format provided you specify the
> On Mar 29, 2020, at 4:52 PM, Adrien Monteleone
> wrote:
>
> Linux and Mac don’t generally care if a file has an extension. They determine
> the file type independent of it.
That's sadly no longer true of MacOS and hasn't been since IIRC 10.7. The
pre-NeXTStep MacOS used a extended attribu
My reply below in red bold letters.
On Mon, Mar 30, 2020 at 7:53 AM Adrien Monteleone <
adrien.montele...@lusfiber.net> wrote:
> No, it is a csv, but you have the option to specify an extension or not.
>
> Linux and Mac don’t generally care if a file has an extension. They
> determine the file ty
No, it is a csv, but you have the option to specify an extension or not.
Linux and Mac don’t generally care if a file has an extension. They determine
the file type independent of it.
Windows on the other hand does rely somewhat (if not exclusively) on the
extension. (not sure if that changed i
Hi Michael,
*Your Point No. 5 is interesting.*
Gnucash's instruction is Export X to csv. One would be led to believe
that the file type is automatically csv. But in reality, you are saying
that it can export to any format provided you specify the file type as an
extension to the filename.
Al
On 3/28/2020 11:21 PM, Adrian Yong wrote:
I can't change the file type...
Neither can I access Excel by choosing Open With...
Finally got to add file type extension .csv to filename. That worked... I
think gnucash should either addd anothe filetype dialog box or advise users
to add filetype ext
Thanks Fred...
On Sun, 29 Mar. 2020, 16:54 Fred Bone, wrote:
> On 29 March 2020 at 10:40, Adrian Yong said:
>
> > Hi Adrien,
> >
> > Below is the screenshot... I get a file type FILE.
> >
> > [image: image.png]
>
> Because you chose to give it a plain name with no ".csv" extension.
>
> > When I
On 29 March 2020 at 10:40, Adrian Yong said:
> Hi Adrien,
>
> Below is the screenshot... I get a file type FILE.
>
> [image: image.png]
Because you chose to give it a plain name with no ".csv" extension.
> When I double click on the file to open it, Excel is not on the list:
>
> [image: image
I can't change the file type...
Neither can I access Excel by choosing Open With...
Finally got to add file type extension .csv to filename. That worked... I
think gnucash should either addd anothe filetype dialog box or advise users
to add filetype extension to the filename.
Thanks
On Sun, Mar
I could be mistaken, but when you save, you should be able to specify a file
extension. If not, simply change it after the fact to “.csv” and see if Excel
is offered as a default app to open it.
Otherwise, you can still open it with Excel via the right-click menu using a
‘open with’ option, or,
CSV files can be opened in Excel or just about any spreadsheet app. There are
also options to ‘Export Transactions’ and ‘Export Active Register”. The Account
Tree is just a shell of a list of accounts with no transactions. I’m not
familiar with how that is different from ‘Export Accounts’. Perha
Hi Adrien,
I tried exporting the "Export Account Tree to csv" and "Export Accounts"
options.
However the exported files cannot be opened in MSExcel nor Acrobat Reader
DC...
Regards,
Adrian
On Thu, Mar 19, 2020 at 8:30 AM Adrian Yong
wrote:
> Thanks Adrien..
>
> On Thu, 19 Mar. 2020, 08:29 Adr
Thanks Adrien..
On Thu, 19 Mar. 2020, 08:29 Adrien Monteleone, <
adrien.montele...@lusfiber.net> wrote:
> If they find info is missing or they don’t care for the formats, report
> back here and we’ll try to help you refine them.
>
> Regards,
> Adrien
>
> > On Mar 18, 2020 w12d78, at 6:01 PM, Adri
If they find info is missing or they don’t care for the formats, report back
here and we’ll try to help you refine them.
Regards,
Adrien
> On Mar 18, 2020 w12d78, at 6:01 PM, Adrian Yong
> wrote:
>
> Thank you very much, Adrien, Michael and Stephen for helping me understand
> Gnucash...
>
>
; On 3/18/2020 1:52 PM, Stephen M. Butler wrote:
> > Adrian,
> >
> > I give my CPA three items:
> >
> > 1. Balance Sheet.
> >
> > 2. Profit Loss statement
> >
> > 3. Transaction Report of all transactions for the year sorted by
> > acc
On 3/18/2020 1:52 PM, Stephen M. Butler wrote:
Adrian,
I give my CPA three items:
1. Balance Sheet.
2. Profit Loss statement
3. Transaction Report of all transactions for the year sorted by
account and then by date within account.
That last is the "general ledger" (when for al
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
12:59 AM, Adrian Yong
> wrote:
>
> Thank you very much for your assistance.
>
> I submit the following to the auditors:
>
> 1) P&L
> 2) Balance Sheet
> 3) Journal
> 4) General Ledger
> 5) Funds(Cash) Flow Statement
> 6) Trial Balance
>
> That
On 3/18/2020 1:59 AM, Adrian Yong wrote:
Thank you very much for your assistance.
I submit the following to the auditors:
1) P&L
2) Balance Sheet
3) Journal
4) General Ledger
5) Funds(Cash) Flow Statement
6) Trial Balance
That's because they don't use QuickBooks...
Regards,
Thank you very much for your assistance.
I submit the following to the auditors:
1) P&L
2) Balance Sheet
3) Journal
4) General Ledger
5) Funds(Cash) Flow Statement
6) Trial Balance
That's because they don't use QuickBooks...
Regards,
Adrian
On Wed, 18 Mar. 2020, 13:21 Adr
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 wi
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
On Wed, 18 Mar. 2020, 01:28 Adrien
I think I understand now what you are asking.
TLDR; your GnuCash file **is** the General Ledger. GnuCash **is not**
QuickBooks. QuickBooks has a separate view of the General Ledger because they
otherwise hide it from you.
QuickBooks in particular, hides the double-entry nature of accounting
Adrien,
In the General Ledger, every account has it history recorded and all these
is collated in one book called the General Ledger...
As I am used to QuickBooks and manually accounting methods, the General
Ledger is the basis for P&L, and Balance Sheet. QuickBooks seems to emulate
ma
If you mean you want to see the individual transaction activity in your
accounts related to a single customer, yes.
If you just want to see the balanced owed by all customers, you can use the
Accounts Receivable report. (each customer can be listed separately, along with
a total)
But both of t
enu.
> >
> > On Tue, 17 Mar 2020, 12:18 pm Adrian Yong,
> > wrote:
> >
> >> Hi Adrien,
> >>
> >> In other accounting software, the General Ledger gives the ending
> balances
> >> for each of the accounts which are then posted to the Bal
0, 12:18 pm Adrian Yong,
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hi Adrien,
>>>>
>>>> In other accounting software, the General Ledger gives the ending
>>>> balances
>>>> for each of the accounts which are then posted to the Balance Sheet..
>
eport in the experimental menu.
>
> On Tue, 17 Mar 2020, 12:18 pm Adrian Yong,
> wrote:
>
>> Hi Adrien,
>>
>> In other accounting software, the General Ledger gives the ending balances
>> for each of the accounts which are then posted to the Balance Sheet..
>>
&g
ar. 2020, 12:29 Christopher Lam,
> wrote:
>
>> Try the customer report in the experimental menu.
>>
>> On Tue, 17 Mar 2020, 12:18 pm Adrian Yong,
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Adrien,
>>>
>>> In other accounting software, the General Ledger gives
12:18 pm Adrian Yong,
> wrote:
>
>> Hi Adrien,
>>
>> In other accounting software, the General Ledger gives the ending balances
>> for each of the accounts which are then posted to the Balance Sheet..
>>
>> For example, the General Ledger would give details
Try the customer report in the experimental menu.
On Tue, 17 Mar 2020, 12:18 pm Adrian Yong,
wrote:
> Hi Adrien,
>
> In other accounting software, the General Ledger gives the ending balances
> for each of the accounts which are then posted to the Balance Sheet..
>
> For ex
Hi Adrien,
In other accounting software, the General Ledger gives the ending balances
for each of the accounts which are then posted to the Balance Sheet..
For example, the General Ledger would give details of all transactions
between the opening balance and the ending balance for a particular
the requests for more information.
Regards,
Adrien
> On Mar 16, 2020 w12d76, at 10:33 PM, Adrien Monteleone
> wrote:
>
> Is this a duplicate question?
>
> Something very similar appeared on this list just a few days ago.
>
> GnuCash *is* the ‘general ledger’.
>
Is this a duplicate question?
Something very similar appeared on this list just a few days ago.
GnuCash *is* the ‘general ledger’.
Certainly, you can run a transaction report showing whatever you need. (among
many other reports)
Opening balance transactions are common for people with pre
Hi,
I am trying to generate a General Ledger which lists all the transactions
for the period, opening balance and closing balance for each account and or
subaccount.
Can someone guide me through the General Ledger process to achieve this,
please ?
Regards,
Adrian
In that sense, GnuCash *is* the General Ledger.
There is a General Journal, which contains all transactions. (most recent 30
days visible by default)
There is each individual account containing opening balances and all subsequent
transactions. (closing entries are not required by GnuCash, but
Hi,
Is a General Ledger in GNUcash, the same as for general accounting
practices where transactions, opening and closing balances are listed for
every account and subaccounts ?
Regards,
Adrian
___
gnucash-user mailing list
gnucash-user@gnucash.org
To
> On 11 Mar 2020, at 20:03, Adrian Yong wrote:
>
> Hi Michael,
>
> I have reading a lot of posts on this issue...
>
> I have been using QuickBooks for quite a while.
>
> I would like to generate a GL like i do in QB..
>
> The GL should contain all the parent and children accounts...
>
> In
Op zaterdag 15 september 2018 09:31:00 CEST schreef David Carlson:
> Alas, I keep going further down the rabbit hole. Now I discovered that the
> General Ledger view had somehow been corrupted and none of the standard
> register menu functions were available. So I saved the file, th
Op zaterdag 15 september 2018 09:16:31 CEST schreef David Carlson:
> One more detail: in the General Ledger, when changing the criteria to
> matches regex, entering .* for the regex and changing type to add results
> to current search, the new result is not filtered by date as it was
>
Alas, I keep going further down the rabbit hole. Now I discovered that the
General Ledger view had somehow been corrupted and none of the standard
register menu functions were available. So I saved the file, then it was
possible to see that the View > Filter by status was still set to start
One more detail: in the General Ledger, when changing the criteria to
matches regex, entering .* for the regex and changing type to add results
to current search, the new result is not filtered by date as it was
originally. In fact, the View > Filter By menu item is greyed out and
unavaila
Ledger window. Further, the results are presented in a new window
when started from the main accounts hierarchy page or from a normal Account
Register window, but the results are presented in the *same window when
started from the General Ledger window*. This is probably designed to
respect the
I think you just close the search tab.
On September 14, 2018, at 6:13 PM, David Carlson
wrote:
While I happen to be using release 2.6.19 or so, I think my problem is
still current. I opened a general ledger view then I searched for
transactions containing certain text in the description. This
While I happen to be using release 2.6.19 or so, I think my problem is
still current. I opened a general ledger view then I searched for
transactions containing certain text in the description. This left the
results in the general ledger view. How do I return to the general ledger
view before the
-user
Sent: 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 t
gt; again to the General Journal. This works for all normal account registers, ut
> for the General Ledger this was missed.
>
>>
>> And if it's not doing what it's meant to, has a bug report been entered?
>
> https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=714708
Gre
; question. Could you enlighten me, please?
It's meant to save the filter configuration such that when you reopen your
book at a later time, the same filter settings would be applied automatically
again to the General Journal. This works for all normal account registers, ut
for the General
On 2018-03-03 09:54, Wm via gnucash-user wrote:
> On 03/03/2018 13:47, Stan Brown wrote:
>>
>> On 2018-03-02 13:47, Wm via gnucash-user wrote:
>> There is a checkbox, "Save filter", in the filter-defining window. What
>> is that meant to do?
>
> I think what it is *meant* to do is fairly obvio
On 03/03/2018 13:47, Stan Brown wrote:
On 2018-03-02 13:47, Wm via gnucash-user wrote:
On 23/02/2018 12:52, Adrien Monteleone wrote:
And unfortunately, this filter change is not sticky. You’ll have to
reset it each time you load the GL. This is already a filed bug.
AdrienM, it is not a bug i
On 26/02/2018 18:16, Greg Feneis wrote:
I keep seeing this email subject line and imagine you guys are discussing a
lesser known war hero
Thank you, Mr Feneis, I'm not sure what this thread is really about
either but commend your humour.
It doesn't really matter what the damn thing is calle
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 distribute. Several of the previous commenter's may have been quite
accurate in regards to the historical p
It doesn’t work on this particular register, hence the bug report.
If I’m not mistaken, one of the bug comments even mentions this was an
oversight when the dialog was updated some time ago.
Note, the bug isn’t that the date window is too small by default. The bug is
that you can’t save your pr
On 2018-03-02 13:47, Wm via gnucash-user wrote:
> On 23/02/2018 12:52, Adrien Monteleone wrote:
>> And unfortunately, this filter change is not sticky. You’ll have to
>> reset it each time you load the GL. This is already a filed bug.
>
> AdrienM, it is not a bug if you have many years of tx, prom
posted into ledgers, one per account.
The collection of ledger books was the "general ledger", while the nominal
time-ordered collection of journal entries was the "general journal" (or
the "general journal" was the journal in which transactions which didn't
be
On 23/02/2018 12:52, Adrien Monteleone wrote:
And unfortunately, this filter change is not sticky. You’ll have to reset it
each time you load the GL. This is already a filed bug.
AdrienM, it is not a bug if you have many years of tx, promise. I like
the narrow time window.
--
Wm
_
On 02/26/18 13:50, Liz wrote:
On Mon, 26 Feb 2018 10:16:06 -0800
Greg Feneis wrote:
I keep seeing this email subject line and imagine you guys are
discussing a lesser known war hero
Kind regards,
Greg Feneis
Yes, he/she fought against Manuel Labour.
Liz
Oh. I thought Manuel Labour was
On Mon, 26 Feb 2018 10:16:06 -0800
Greg Feneis wrote:
> I keep seeing this email subject line and imagine you guys are
> discussing a lesser known war hero
>
>
> Kind regards,
>
> Greg Feneis
Yes, he/she fought against Manuel Labour.
Liz
___
gnucas
I keep seeing this email subject line and imagine you guys are discussing a
lesser known war hero
Kind regards,
Greg Feneis
On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 9:08 AM, Mike or Penny Novack <
stepbystepf...@dialup4less.com> wrote:
> On 2/26/2018 7:34 AM, Buddha Buck wrote:
>
>> It's not an Australian ac
On 2/26/2018 7:34 AM, Buddha Buck wrote:
It's not an Australian accounting thing, unless I managed to grab
Australian book out of my small-city upstate New York library system some
30 years ago...
Or me, more like 50 years ago, and the books would have been my dad's
from a generation earlier th
Ledger
under Tools shows what is like a journal except that some history is
lost because the entries may be changed without the use of a correcting
journal entry. With that in mind and the distinction noted above, this
seems to be a general ledger rather than a general journal unless one
uses strict
On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 5:38 AM elvis wrote:
>
>> On 25/02/18 07:54, Dave H wrote:
>>> Well from my point of view that is confusing. Nobody in my world refers
>> to
>>> a "General Journal" we refer to the "General Ledger" and we do journals
>
6-18 7:34 AM
To: elvis
Cc: gnucash-user@gnucash.org
Subject: Re: General Ledger
It's not an Australian accounting thing, unless I managed to grab Australian
book out of my small-city upstate New York library system some 30 years
ago...
On Mon, Feb 26, 2018 at 5:38 AM elvis wrote:
> On 25/02
using. Nobody in my world refers
> to
> > a "General Journal" we refer to the "General Ledger" and we do journals
> > :-) I've never actually heard the term general journal used anywhere
> > before until this discussion over the weekend !!!
>
&
On 25/02/18 07:54, Dave H wrote:
Well from my point of view that is confusing. Nobody in my world refers to
a "General Journal" we refer to the "General Ledger" and we do journals
:-) I've never actually heard the term general journal used anywhere
before until this di
On 2/25/2018 2:06 PM, Dave H wrote:
Thanks for explaining the distinction Michael.
So I take from all this that the General Journal/General Ledger
distinction is an historical distinction no longer in real use with
the advent of computerised accounting software.
No, that wasn't quite w
Thanks for explaining the distinction Michael.
So I take from all this that the General Journal/General Ledger distinction
is an historical distinction no longer in real use with the advent of
computerised accounting software. It still doesn't explain for me why the
intent is to r
On 2/24/2018 4:54 PM, Dave H wrote:
Well from my point of view that is confusing. Nobody in my world refers to
a "General Journal" we refer to the "General Ledger" and we do journals
:-) I've never actually heard the term general journal used anywhere
before until
Well from my point of view that is confusing. Nobody in my world refers to
a "General Journal" we refer to the "General Ledger" and we do journals
:-) I've never actually heard the term general journal used anywhere
before until this discussion over the weekend !
ebruary 2015. However as
this affected many translatable strings, I decided back then to fix this only
on master (to become 3.0 soon). So gnucash 2.6 will still use the term
"General Ledger".
And looking further I have found I then mixed things up in October 2015: after
some discussi
ogy regarding journals and ledgers is
> somewhat confused and non-standard.
>
> My basic understanding of classical accounting is that transactions were
> first entered into journals, and then posted into ledgers, one per account.
> The collection of ledger books was the "general led
"general ledger", while the nominal
time-ordered collection of journal entries was the "general journal" (or
the "general journal" was the journal in which transactions which didn't
belong in the sales journal, purchase journal, etc were recorded).
In GnuCash term
Stan,
No I knew you were referring to the Ledger and I think David did also though he
linked to the help on the Journal.
Unfortunately, it seems the Help file needs a tweak. (or the software) The link
he gives describes in fact, the General Ledger. The terminology on the title
and within the
Thanks, Adrien.
Please note that I asked about the general ledger, not the general journal, but
I see that the filter works the same way (now that I know to try it).
As the documentation mentions only the general journal, maybe "and general
ledger" should be added, for the benefi
2018, at 4:27 PM, Stan Brown wrote:
>>
>> There doesn't seem to be any documentation of Tools » General Ledger,
>> neither in the Help Manual nor in the Concepts Tutorial. (I couldn't
>> find an answer in the FAQ or Using GnuCash either.)
>>
>> I have t
uot; on the View menu."
> On Feb 23, 2018, at 4:27 PM, Stan Brown wrote:
>
> There doesn't seem to be any documentation of Tools » General Ledger,
> neither in the Help Manual nor in the Concepts Tutorial. (I couldn't
> find an answer in the FAQ or Using GnuCash either
Look in the View menu.
-derek
Sent using my mobile device. Please excuse any typos.
On February 23, 2018 6:28:00 AM Stan Brown wrote:
There doesn't seem to be any documentation of Tools » General Ledger,
neither in the Help Manual nor in the Concepts Tutorial. (I couldn't
find an
There doesn't seem to be any documentation of Tools » General Ledger,
neither in the Help Manual nor in the Concepts Tutorial. (I couldn't
find an answer in the FAQ or Using GnuCash either.)
I have transactions entered from 2017-12-31 though 2018-01-31. But for
some reason, the Gene
On 2/6/2018 12:15 PM, Mike Donovan wrote:
Having recorded many transactions to the cash account, I would like to copy
these to the GL (which has no transactions currently) and then use the GL for
recording all future transactions. Can this be done? Thanks.
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
Review
Adrien:
Thanks again. Geert’s recommendation regarding the filter solved my problem.
Regards,
Mike
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Adrien Monteleone
Sent: Tuesday, February 6, 2018 3:43 PM
To: gnucash-user
Subject: Re: Copying transactions from an account to the general ledger
Mike,
See
Geert:
Thanks for your helpful reply. I can now see all transactions.
Best Wishes,
Mike
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
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gnucash-user mailing l
> Thanks for your reply. When I go to Tools> General Ledger, I show a new line
> waiting for transaction entry. No other transactions are shown. Is it
> possible that I need to change a setting to get your (favorable) result?
>
> Regards,
> Mike
>
> Sent from Mail &
GnuCash doesn’t have a GL as a separate account. There’s a General Ledger
register view (Tools>General Ledger; afterwards use View>Filter By... to select
the date range displayed)
that shows all transactions sorted by date and in split view; this is the same
view that you get if you run
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