Brian
Not that I'm an expert, but I figured I'd do your work for you and read over
the XBRL wikipedia article.
A few things pop out at me:
1) XBRL appears to be a framework for financial reports. There's a ton of
discussion in the article about developing taxonomies and extensibility, but
I don't know these answers, but maybe they can be found
here:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XBRLhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XBRL_International
Brian-
On Friday, January 26, 2024 at 06:20:44 PM EST, John Ralls
wrote:
> On Jan 26, 2024, at 12:42 PM, Frank H. Ellenberger
>
> On Jan 26, 2024, at 12:42 PM, Frank H. Ellenberger
> wrote:
>
>
>
> Am 25.01.24 um 19:59 schrieb John Ralls:
>> Not really, it looks like a big-business thing.
> OTOH I sem more and more governments requesting data for tex declaration in
> xbrl format.
> Prehaps we should start with
Am 25.01.24 um 19:59 schrieb John Ralls:
Not really, it looks like a big-business thing.
OTOH I sem more and more governments requesting data for tex declaration
in xbrl format.
Prehaps we should start with xbrl as a report format?
Regards
Frank
> On Jan 25, 2024, at 4:45 AM, briancady413--- via gnucash-devel
> wrote:
>
> In a recent reddit post, someone lamented that GNUCash had no support for
> im/exporting in .xbrl format, which they said was a ubiquitous global
> standard format for books.
>
> XBRL - Wikipedia
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In a recent reddit post, someone lamented that GNUCash had no support for
im/exporting in .xbrl format, which they said was a ubiquitous global standard
format for books.
XBRL - Wikipedia
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XBRL - Wikipedia
XBRL is a standards-based way to communicate and