I know GnuCash and budgeting is a perennial issue. I haven't seen what
I suggest below covered before and welcome pointers if that is not the case.
1. GnuCash's current budgeting tools are dismal; they are hard to work
out how to use and even when you know how to use them they don't do what
I myself have been considering some sort of extraction tool, not for
budgeting but for mining the data. most of us use spreadsheets to do the
graphs and to have the data closed up in gnucash is my biggest problem.
I will check your project for sure, use it and probably translate it if I
see a
I have spent some time to investigate what is needed to support credit notes
in GnuCash. The result of my analysis can be found here:
http://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/Credit_Notes
For simplicity I'm using the term credit note as the inverse of all invoice
types we support so far
On 11 Sep 2011, at 11:26 PM, Geert Janssens wrote:
I have spent some time to investigate what is needed to support
credit notes
in GnuCash. The result of my analysis can be found here:
http://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/Credit_Notes
For simplicity I'm using the term credit note as the inverse of
On 2011-09-11 17:44, Tiago Neiva wrote:
I myself have been considering some sort of extraction tool, not for
budgeting but for mining the data. most of us use spreadsheets to do the
graphs and to have the data closed up in gnucash is my biggest problem.
I will check your project for sure, use