Personally, I'd export the data I wanted (from a report, say) to a spreadsheet.
David T.
On Feb 3, 2024, 7:09 PM, at 7:09 PM, Phyllis Bruce wrote:
>藍藍藍
>
>
>> On Feb 3, 2024, at 9:53 AM, G R Hewitt wrote:
>>
>> 'Visualise' is the horizontal wavy line that hovers in your field of
>>
藍藍藍
> On Feb 3, 2024, at 9:53 AM, G R Hewitt wrote:
>
> 'Visualise' is the horizontal wavy line that hovers in your field of
> vision, which wavers between bankruptcy and abundance.
> 'Map Out' is where you stick pins (virtual) where you want the peaks and
> troughs of that line to be.
>
'Visualise' is the horizontal wavy line that hovers in your field of
vision, which wavers between bankruptcy and abundance.
'Map Out' is where you stick pins (virtual) where you want the peaks and
troughs of that line to be.
'Tweak' is to move the pins to where the line is, rather than where you
That's a fairly broad question, and I'm not clear *exactly* what you
mean by 'visualize' 'map out' and 'tweak'.
GnuCash does have a Budget module that works much like a spreadsheet.
Various Reports, Charts & Graphs are available based on the budget and
can compare actuals as well as show
I use spreadsheets for budgeting and I usually map out the expenses over the
year to visualize financial health in the future and I am able to tweak this
with ease. How can you do something similar on gnucash?
regards
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