Doriano Blengino a écrit :
...
while only 2% of them want to use financial capabilities. So, that 2%
must live with a language not very suitable for accounting. Use long
integers, divide them, use format$()... is the reply from Benoit. Does
someone remember the Cobol? With a simple
Jean-Yves F. Barbier ha scritto:
Doriano Blengino a écrit :
...
while only 2% of them want to use financial capabilities. So, that 2%
must live with a language not very suitable for accounting. Use long
integers, divide them, use format$()... is the reply from Benoit. Does
someone
Doriano Blengino a écrit :
Don't burry Cobol too fast: for banking *only*, this year will be around
5 milliards Cobol written lines (progression is an avg of 14% per year).
This is a proof that well designed things get a long life. Ok, cobol was
invented exactly for that purpose - sadness
Doriano Blengino schrieb:
nando ha scritto:
My contribution to this conversation is..
Always INT or LONG for money.
Keep a global variable to divide by (for example 2 decimal places) 100
when printing/displaying things to humans...
-OR- to take the string and insert a period for cents
Jean-Yves F. Barbier ha scritto:
Doriano Blengino a écrit :
Don't burry Cobol too fast: for banking *only*, this year will be around
5 milliards Cobol written lines (progression is an avg of 14% per year).
This is a proof that well designed things get a long life. Ok, cobol was
Doriano Blengino a écrit :
...
A strongness inherited from pascal... I gave a look to many, countless
hmm, I don't think Pascal can define vars as temperature[-10, +50]
languages, and only few met my own requirements - strong typization,
good compiler checks, overloading and, of
Jean-Yves F. Barbier ha scritto:
Doriano Blengino a écrit :
...
A strongness inherited from pascal... I gave a look to many, countless
hmm, I don't think Pascal can define vars as temperature[-10, +50]
What do you mean precisely? Can you define the properties of
2009/12/15 Doriano Blengino doriano.bleng...@fastwebnet.it:
Jean-Yves F. Barbier ha scritto:
Doriano Blengino a écrit :
...
A strongness inherited from pascal... I gave a look to many, countless
hmm, I don't think Pascal can define vars as temperature[-10, +50]
What do you mean
I don't like floats.
They are slow, and bitchy;
Dim n As Single
n = 1.4 - 0.2
Print n
And the result is 1.20047684, which is obviously wrong from math
point of view.
Correcting floating point artifact, makes floats even slower.
And it is surprisingly common to be able to use integers instead.
Jean-Yves F. Barbier ha scritto:
Doriano Blengino a écrit :
A strongness inherited from pascal... I gave a look to many, countless
hmm, I don't think Pascal can define vars as temperature[-10, +50]
What do you mean precisely? Can you define the properties of
Hi,
thank you for all the information. I also found a system made in
Finland using PHP. It is called pupesoft and it's web-address is
http://www.devlab.fi/pupesoft
So now when I have time I will test all of these and see how they work.
Best Regards
Kari
Hi,
I have already done little billing program for my parents little firm.
It was a learning exercise. It would make a big help to get little
companies to move to Linux if there was a financial program that run
on Linux and would be free. There comes in Gambas.
Is there already an GPLed
you have Laurux at http://laurux.fr/
but the code is not perfect has it was on the start a code learning
programme.. but at the end it's a true accounting program... in french
(Gb2)
2009/12/14 Kari Laine klai...@gmail.com:
Hi,
I have already done little billing program for my parents
Fabien Bodard a écrit :
you have Laurux at http://laurux.fr/
but the code is not perfect has it was on the start a code learning
programme.. but at the end it's a true accounting program... in french
(Gb2)
BTW, do you plan to have an equivalent of postgresql or python decimal(n,n)
into GB3?
On 14/12/09 23:32, Kari Laine wrote:
Hi,
I have already done little billing program for my parents little firm.
It was a learning exercise. It would make a big help to get little
companies to move to Linux if there was a financial program that run
on Linux and would be free. There comes in
Fabien Bodard a écrit :
you have Laurux at http://laurux.fr/
but the code is not perfect has it was on the start a code learning
programme.. but at the end it's a true accounting program... in french
(Gb2)
BTW, do you plan to have an equivalent of postgresql or python decimal(n,n)
Hi,
There is Quasar from Linux Canada. It is very similar to MYOB. Their
last GPL version is 1.4.7, I think.
Do you have the source for the GPL version. I visited their site and
couldn't find it.
If you think you can write a decent accounting program in 3 man months
you don't know what the
Hi,
thanks
On Mon, Dec 14, 2009 at 6:03 PM, Fabien Bodard gambas...@gmail.com wrote:
you have Laurux at http://laurux.fr/
but the code is not perfect has it was on the start a code learning
programme.. but at the end it's a true accounting program... in french
(Gb2)
I don't read a single
Benoît Minisini a écrit :
Fabien Bodard a écrit :
you have Laurux at http://laurux.fr/
but the code is not perfect has it was on the start a code learning
programme.. but at the end it's a true accounting program... in french
(Gb2)
BTW, do you plan to have an equivalent of postgresql or
Kari Laine a écrit :
Hi,
thanks
On Mon, Dec 14, 2009 at 6:03 PM, Fabien Bodard gambas...@gmail.com wrote:
you have Laurux at http://laurux.fr/
but the code is not perfect has it was on the start a code learning
programme.. but at the end it's a true accounting program... in french
On 15/12/09 01:22, Kari Laine wrote:
Hi,
There is Quasar from Linux Canada. It is very similar to MYOB. Their
last GPL version is 1.4.7, I think.
Do you have the source for the GPL version. I visited their site and
couldn't find it.
If you think you can write a decent
@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: [Gambas-user] Financial program
Hi,
I have already done little billing program for my parents little firm.
It was a learning exercise. It would make a big help to get little
companies to move to Linux if there was a financial program that run
on Linux and would be free
Kari Laine wrote:
Hi,
I have already done little billing program for my parents little firm.
It was a learning exercise. It would make a big help to get little
companies to move to Linux if there was a financial program that run
on Linux and would be free. There comes in Gambas.
Is there
Benoît Minisini a écrit :
Benoît Minisini a écrit :
Fabien Bodard a écrit :
you have Laurux at http://laurux.fr/
but the code is not perfect has it was on the start a code learning
programme.. but at the end it's a true accounting program... in french
(Gb2)
BTW, do you plan to have an
Benoît Minisini a écrit :
Benoît Minisini a écrit :
Fabien Bodard a écrit :
you have Laurux at http://laurux.fr/
but the code is not perfect has it was on the start a code learning
programme.. but at the end it's a true accounting program... in
french (Gb2)
BTW, do you plan to
1. Accounting programs are very much underestimated.
That's true, indeed.
I know a lot of people who thought that accounting was a minor matter, bought
some program and did something not knowing what they did.
They all got big problems with the tax authorities.
2. Writing an accounting program is
Benoît Minisini a écrit :
...
I think you are mixing a lot of different things:
- When storing a amount of money in memory, you store it in a Long integer in
1/10th of cents. For example, storing 1234,56€ will be stored as 123456
I'm gonna test that, but it implies more load of the DB
Benoît Minisini a écrit :
...
I think you are mixing a lot of different things:
- When storing a amount of money in memory, you store it in a Long
integer in 1/10th of cents. For example, storing 1234,56€ will be stored
as 123456
I'm gonna test that, but it implies more load of
On Monday 14 December 2009, Jean-Yves F. Barbier wrote:
Benoît Minisini a écrit :
...
I think you are mixing a lot of different things:
- When storing a amount of money in memory, you store it in a Long integer
in
1/10th of cents. For example, storing 1234,56€ will be stored as
On Tuesday 15 December 2009, Benoît Minisini wrote:
Again we are talking about currencies. What's the matter with telephony
seconds? If you want to say that you have to store 1/1000th of cents, ro
more,
just choose a more precise format. With a Long datatype and using 1/100th
of
@lists.sourceforge.net
Sent: Tue, 15 Dec 2009 00:38:35 +0100
Subject: Re: [Gambas-user] Financial program
On Tuesday 15 December 2009, Benoît Minisini wrote:
Again we are talking about currencies. What's the matter with telephony
seconds? If you want to say that you have to store 1/1000th of cents, ro
nando ha scritto:
My contribution to this conversation is..
Always INT or LONG for money.
Keep a global variable to divide by (for example 2 decimal places) 100
when printing/displaying things to humans...
-OR- to take the string and insert a period for cents (North America)
Make a really
32 matches
Mail list logo