Hello,
Although I am *not* an accountant, I understand that in standard accounting,
income is shown as a negative balance. The Tutorial covers this.
There is a setting that allows you to display income accounts with reversed
signs, if this bothers you.
David
On March 11, 2018, at 8:59 AM, Ke
I just upgraded to v2.6.19 (on OSX High Sierra) and now the balances in the
Customer Overview screen are incorrect. Receivable Ageing and Customer
Reports are correct.
It looks like random old transactions are not included in the balances (e.g.
some invoices from 2015 or 2016 but not their paym
I am thinking it could be dependent upon what account type you set it up as.
Is it set as an Income Account or an Expense Account type? It is possible
you have it setup as an Expense Account type which is why it would show as a
negative expense?If that is not it -- then you would have to give
I just finished setting up gnuCASH and found that after entering income (and
other date ie expenses, etc) it shows up as negative(in parenthesis). This
would mean a negative income? Why would it not show as expected - POSITIVE
income since there was no loss. Is this how accounting works? What am I
Many thanks for further response.
I have separate user accounts, etc, but I was running the other accounts from
my personal login having given myself access to the other "user" files.
I just logged in properly as the other user and magic there are no saved
reports.
So my question is answered, j
OK DOKE
On Sat, Mar 10, 2018 at 12:00 PM, David Carlson wrote:
> Edward, Please use reply all to include the maillist.
>
> You need to read the manual and understand how double entry bookkeeping
> works. You do not really have hundreds of accounts that don't actually
> exist. As you stated ori
Edward, Please use reply all to include the maillist.
You need to read the manual and understand how double entry bookkeeping
works. You do not really have hundreds of accounts that don't actually
exist. As you stated originally, you only have three bank accounts. All
the others would be what w
Jim,
Mike was referring to separate Windows logins. I suspect you're talking about
different Gnucash files. If you use Gnucash for different Gnucash files, but
from the same Windows login, you will have the same stored reports for all of
them. If you have a different Windows login for each, the
On 03/10/2018 11:16 AM, David Carlson wrote:
The QDF format is one of the data formats that Quicken has used over the
years. It is proprietary and sufficiently encrypted to be impossible to
read with other programs. Before you abandon Quicken you need to use it to
open your file and export your
I believe you have to export from quicken to QIF. Should be in the
menus somewhere.
Colin
On 10 March 2018 at 16:12, Ken Pyzik wrote:
> Edward -- I did the switch about 8 months ago and have not looked back.
>
> I am pretty sure you can directly import your file from Quicken. I do not
> remembe
The QDF format is one of the data formats that Quicken has used over the
years. It is proprietary and sufficiently encrypted to be impossible to
read with other programs. Before you abandon Quicken you need to use it to
open your file and export your data to QIF format which GnuCash can
import.
Edward -- I did the switch about 8 months ago and have not looked back.
I am pretty sure you can directly import your file from Quicken. I do not
remember exactly how I did it but I think QIF means quicken file so it
should work.
Three things to be aware:
1. If you use categories -- those no
My Quicken files are stored in .QDF format, not .QIF. (Quicken 2017)
How can I import these? I do not wish to continue using quicken.
I only have three bank accounts and no investments. I do not need the
extras of Quicken.
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gnucash-user mailing list
gn
Many thanks for quick response.
I do actually have two user accounts at the moment but the reports are
common.
Perhaps my configuration needs changing?
I am using Windows10
Regards
Jim
-Original Message-
From: gnucash-user
On Behalf Of Mike or Penny Novack
Sent: 10 March 2018 01:03 PM
On 3/10/2018 6:52 AM, Jim Billinghurst wrote:
I use gnucash to run my personal finances.
I also run the finances for a charity in another data set.
I am about to take on the accounting for a third entity.
Although the data files are clearly separate, all the reports are in one
place.
GnuCash is brilliant!
This is my first question after using GnuCash for over 10 years.
I use gnucash to run my personal finances.
I also run the finances for a charity in another data set.
I am about to take on the accounting for a third entity.
Although the data files are clearly
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