Hi Andy
You said:
> Next step is trying the complement: "[^uo][^br]$"
> But this does not work as "Anzeiger" ist although filtered out.
Because you are anchoring the pattern match to the end of the account
name (with the '$'), and specifying two character classes (with the
'[]') this pattern a
Frank/Guille,
I'm using Flatpak version 4.9-2 on both Linux Mint 20.3 and Ubuntu 21.10 -
quotes retrieval is fine...
Cheers David H.
On Tue, 8 Feb 2022 at 06:48, Frank H. Ellenberger <
frank.h.ellenber...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Hello Guille,
>
> you can see the changes at
> https://github.com/flat
Hello Guille,
you can see the changes at
https://github.com/flathub/org.gnucash.GnuCash/commits/master
They contain:
org.gnome.Platform 41 instead of 40;
…
HTH
Frank
P.S.
I wonder why nobody else reported problems as the changes were tested
before in the nighlies:
https://github.com/Gnucash/gnu
Hello all,
I have been trying to find a report that can show the annualized return on
Capital.
The Advanced Portfolio Report is good, but it shows the "Rate of Return" as
"Total Return" divided by "Money In"
Similar to "Rate of Gain" = "Total Gain" divided by "Money In"
but what I am looking to s
Thanks Gyle and Tommy,
I can see that both your solutions will work. I think I will go with
the double entry option suggested by Tommy. It is just a little more
transparent. Thanks loads for the help.
On 2/6/2022 10:36 AM, Tommy Trussell wrote:
Another option is to let the start of each ac
Shevach,
I think you need to step back and understand the way in which double entry book
keeping/accounting works. There is a section labellsed basic in the Tutorial and
Concepts Guide which explains the basic concepts.
https://www.gnucash.org/docs/v4/C/gnucash-guide/chapter_basics.html.
Wikipedi
On 06 February 2022 at 22:32, Shevach Pepper said:
> Hello there,
> I have two accounts: income (n.ya.) and cash (my pocket)
> I got payed $500 from n. ya. and the money is now in "my pocket".
> My problem is when I record in n. ya. charge $500 and in the transfer
> column 'my pocket" it records
Hi Shevach,
I'm not an accountant, and I freely admit I struggle to understand
double-entry book keeping. But I mange to get things sorted, by thinking of
things logically.
Start looking at this from the Cash (In my Pocket) account. You've received
some Income, so put that amount in the Income co