Sounds great! Congrats.
On Sun, Mar 3, 2024 at 5:34 PM fin wrote:
> as of today i've finally gotten one of my longest
> running accounts imported, balanced, working, it's
> beautiful!
>
> only a few transactions missing from the era of
> hand written passbooks.
>
> i'm tempted to ask
as of today i've finally gotten one of my longest
running accounts imported, balanced, working, it's
beautiful!
only a few transactions missing from the era of
hand written passbooks.
i'm tempted to ask someone if they still have
those records around and to see if i can find those
to fill
Thanks Martin for the response. You are right, I didn't detailed enough.
Now I made a specific beancount file to show what I meant. I defined three
Assets and two commodities to make it more comprehensive:
2022-11-01 commodity EUR 2022-11-01 commodity AAPL 2022-11-01 open
Assets:Bank:Checking
I think also important to know what your mortgage and house buying contract
says. I assumed you signed it together with your partner.
Also, do you have any partnership agreement with your partner. How does it
handle common property?
On Sunday, March 3, 2024 at 8:17:03 PM UTC+1 Chary Chary
Hi,
I would probably do this a bit differently. But let me clarify one thing:
what is the price of your house, which the previous owner got paid. Is this
300,000.00 EUR or 400,000.00 EUR?
Regards.
On Sunday, March 3, 2024 at 12:03:08 PM UTC+1 Tino de Bruijn wrote:
> I've been using
OK. I think I have this figured out.
Unfortunately I don't think the deferred method you are suggesting will
work well in the US, because from my understanding it's used as an expense
to reduce overall income (which in turn reduces your taxes).
So I am going with something like this...
I've been using Beancount for years to track both my business as well as a
shared bank account with friends. However, now I'm trying to set up a way
to track our mortgage, as well as how much each of us (my partner and me)
"own" to the shared account, and I just can't figure out what setup or