Chris,

Remember that we’ve long advised users that they need not close their books, 
they can run a balance sheet report for any day. IMO removing that capability 
would be a major breakage.

I suspect that you needed to use trading accounts because you didn’t book the 
trading gains and losses as income. Users should do that regardless of using 
trading accounts and doing so should make it unnecessary for the balance sheet 
report to include trading accounts.

Unrealized gains are another matter entirely and are a result of using prices 
from the price database instead of actual cost from the transaction data. IMO 
the balance sheet report shouldn’t be taking prices from the price db and 
shouldn’t be able to see unrealized gains, but if price source is going to be 
an option then an unrealized gains line flows from that so that users don’t 
waste a bunch of time chasing an imbalance caused by price differences.

https://bugs.gnucash.org/show_bug.cgi?id=775368 
<https://bugs.gnucash.org/show_bug.cgi?id=775368> is related because that’s 
currently how the balance sheet report gets the “actual” costs.

Regards,
John Ralls

> On Aug 10, 2018, at 11:40 PM, Christopher Lam <christopher....@gmail.com> 
> wrote:
> 
> Hi John
> 
> I've managed to make the left-side (activa?) match the right-side (passiva?)
> 
> https://screenshots.firefox.com/RNvkjaxnYyxpGkYn/null
> 
> 1) it does require closing books on the balance-sheet date
> 
> 2) it does require adding trading-accounts
> 
> The existing balsheet introduces/calculates the "Retained Earnings", "Trading 
> Gains" and "Unrealized Gains", whereas the current iteration of new-balsheet 
> will not.
> 
> To me this is the easiest method to ensure both sides produce the same total, 
> and is now technically correct - if the user has not closed their books, the 
> balance sheet won't balance.
> 
> This is giving me a headache :(
> 
> Should a new balsheet calculate and report these '(fake) retained earnings', 
> and 'unrealized gains' ???
> 
> C
> 
> 
> On 09/08/18 08:32, John Ralls wrote:
>> 
>>> On Aug 8, 2018, at 8:51 AM, Geert Janssens <geert.gnuc...@kobaltwit.be> 
>>> wrote:
>>> 
>>> I haven't been following every detail of this. However I note on most 
>>> balance
>>> sheets the total assets doesn't match total net worth (or 
>>> liabilities/equity).
>>> In most, this is fixed by including the retained earnings.
>>> 
>>> I believe at least in most European countries the "left hand side" (Assets,
>>> Active) and "right hand side" (Passive or liabilities + equity) of the
>>> multicolumn view should balance (it's called balance sheet for a reason).
>>> That would suggest retained earnings does have to be part of the balance
>>> sheet.
>>> 
>>> However I'm not an accountant and perhaps your book is slightly contrived 
>>> so I
>>> don't know the exact answer here.
>>> 
>>> As for the "multi-column" vs one column debate, both present the same data.
>>> The only difference is visual representation or style.
>>> 
>>> As of recently I have become a strong proponent of separating structure (or
>>> accounting functionality in a different context) from style, I think this
>>> should be delegated to the realm of css. This particular layout variation 
>>> can
>>> IMO be handled by making divs for each large group and either let them 
>>> follow
>>> normal flow or use float to move them next to each other. If you will you 
>>> can
>>> have a European style sheet and an American one, or an Australian or 
>>> whatever.
>>> 
>>> As for "categories", I read Frank's earlier reply as if he agreed that at
>>> least for now the account organization is something to be done in the CoA, 
>>> not
>>> in report code.
>> The Balance Sheet is indeed supposed to balance, but in normal practice it 
>> balances only when the book is “closed”, i.e. when all of the income and 
>> expense accounts are summed up and added to Equity. In US corporate books 
>> the cumulative total of income and expenses lives in an Equity account 
>> called “Retained Earnings”.
>> 
>> In the pen-and-paper days a  “Trial Balance” was computed outside of the 
>> books before closing as a way to catch errors before making the closing 
>> entries and writing the formal Balance Sheet.
>> 
>> GnuCash's existing Balance Sheet Report creates the “Retained Earnings” line 
>> so that one need not close the books (Tools>Close Book) in order to get a 
>> balanced report. Removing that feature might be more formally correct but it 
>> would mean that users would have to close their book before running a 
>> balance sheet. That would be a big change and I don’t think that we want to 
>> do it. On the other hand “Retained Earnings” isn’t the right term for many 
>> cases, so it would be a useful improvement to make it configurable.
>> 
>> There’s a second problem with the current report as well: If the user does 
>> close their books periodically they’ll have an account for the accumulation 
>> that may well be called “Retained Earnings”. The Balance Sheet Report will 
>> dutifully report the contents of that account and, if there are income and 
>> expenses after the last close, add a second “Retained Earnings” line. That 
>> looks a bit odd and might be confusing; ISTR we’ve had comments on the user 
>> list about just that.
>> 
>> Regards,
>> John Ralls
>> 
>> _______________________________________________
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>> gnucash-devel@gnucash.org
>> https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-devel
> 
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