I am really struggling with this. Creating and paying a Credit Note does
indeed reduce the income appropriately. However, the Customer Report shows
a Totals increase instead of a reduction. Here is my situation. I use
GnuCash to manage income and expenses for a non-profit organization
> On Dec 12, 2020, at 4:39 PM, Richard Solomon
> wrote:
>
> I am an American expat who operates a small overseas proprietorship. As a
> sole trader I must submit financial accounts domestically as well as in the
> US. Am I able to toggle between base currencies or must I duplicate
>
I am an American expat who operates a small overseas proprietorship. As a
sole trader I must submit financial accounts domestically as well as in the
US. Am I able to toggle between base currencies or must I duplicate
accounting entries in two separate gnucash files in order to report both
I'll add that I have seen some discussion for a future version of
GnuCash to treat unposted invoices as 'Quotes' and unposted bills as
'Purchase Orders' (both in name only) by default. While this doesn't add
any special functionality, this change would make it easier and faster
to print the
Eric,
Not sure what you mean by 'modify and save the templates' and then not
being sure how to use them again.
First, there are four Invoices in Reports > Business—Easy, Fancy,
Printable, and Tax. A cursory glance at the options and they all look
the same to me, but detailed testing would
Sorry if this comes across as too elementary; I'm using GnuCash in a
home-based business and I'd like to take advantage of billing and
invoicing capabilities more fully.
First: I'd like to be able to generate custom "printable invoice"
formats for specific purposes. Say, I'd like to have a "Price