Hi guys,
Gnucash is great - I think it's one of the killer apps for Linux.
Anyway, I've been trying to get OFX support working in Ubuntu, and from
what I can tell is that it was working
(https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnucash/+bug/5973,
Geert Janssens [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Wednesday 28 May 2008, Derek Atkins wrote:
Geert Janssens [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
On Tuesday 27 May 2008, you wrote:
Gnucash has some bizaare flaws though: gnucash will actively stop you
trying to give your customer a refund by refusing to
Daniel,
My major concern here is that a year ago you were rallying for
GDA and GdaQuery. Phil threw out a bunch of his work to target
GDA-3 with GdaQuery. Now here we are, 6 or 9 months later, and
the GDA team has moved on to GDA-4 already and are dropping GdaQuery,
the very interface you were
Daniel Espinosa [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I just want to point that if you use V4 you may will get inmediatly
access to SQLite database, and after the API is stable enough the
other database providers will be on the road.
How long in the future is this down the road? I'm concerned
about your
Derek Atkins wrote:
A Process Payment gives you that Negative number. What you would
do is Process Payment to, say, your checking account. Then after
the transaction gets posted you can go in and change it from Checking
to Income. Make sure you only change the account, not the AMOUNT.
Quoting Graham Leggett [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Derek Atkins wrote:
A Process Payment gives you that Negative number. What you would
do is Process Payment to, say, your checking account. Then after
the transaction gets posted you can go in and change it from Checking
to Income. Make sure you
[[Sorry, forgot to reply to list]]
I have created a feature request for credit notes in bugzilla:
http://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=535781
I have added most of the parts of this thread I considered relevant, together
with some freewheeling on the implementation.
Although I'll probably
Getting back to the gda stuff, the key question seems to be: Can support for
mysql and postgresql wait?
If so, then V4 seems like a good choice to me, since Phil has said (I think)
that it works well enough with sqlite for our purposes. Support for the
other databases can be added as V4 evolves.