miscellaneous README corrections
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24
README
24
README
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@ -9,9 +9,9 @@ Ledger is an accounting tool with the moxie to exist. It provides no
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bells or whistles, and returns the user to the days before user
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interfaces were even a twinkling in their father's CRT.
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What it does do is to offer a double-entry accounting ledger with all
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the flexibility and muscle of its modern day cousins, without any of
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the fat. Think of it as the Bran Muffin of accounting tools.
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What it does offer is a double-entry accounting ledger with all the
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flexibility and muscle of its modern day cousins, without any of the
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fat. Think of it as the Bran Muffin of accounting tools.
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To use it, you need to start keeping a ledger. This is the basis of
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all accounting, and if you haven't started yet, now is the time to
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@ -40,7 +40,7 @@ of all your accounts, not just checking. In such a ledger, you record
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not only who gets paid -- in the case of a debit -- but where the
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money came from. In a checkbook ledger, its assumed that all the
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money comes from your checking account. But in a general ledger, you
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write transaction two-lines: The source account and target account.
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write transaction two-lines: the source account and target account.
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*There must always be a debit from at least one account for every
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credit made to another account*. This is what is meant by
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"double-entry" accounting: the ledger must always balance to zero,
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@ -94,7 +94,7 @@ track of the balances for you. Your only job is to enter the
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credit/debit transactions. If a transaction does not balance, Ledger
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will display an error and indicate which transaction is wrong.[1]
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In summary, there are two aspects of Ledger use: Updating the ledger
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In summary, there are two aspects of Ledger use: updating the ledger
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data file, and using the Ledger tool to view the summarized result of
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your entries.
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@ -158,12 +158,12 @@ you.
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The Ledger program aims at making ledger entry as simple as possible.
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Since it is a command-line tool, it does not provide a user interface
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for keeping a ledger. If you like, you may use Gnucash to maintain
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your ledger, in which case the Ledger program will read Gnucash's data
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files directly. In that case, read the Gnucash manual now, and skip
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for keeping a ledger. If you like, you may use GnuCash to maintain
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your ledger, in which case the Ledger program will read GnuCash's data
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files directly. In that case, read the GnuCash manual now, and skip
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to the next chapter.
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If you are not using Gnucash, but a text editor to maintain your
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If you are not using GnuCash, but a text editor to maintain your
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ledger, read on. Ledger has been designed to make data entry as
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simple as possible, by keeping the ledger format easy, and also by
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automagically determining as much information as possible based on the
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@ -254,7 +254,7 @@ leave. This is the beginning of economy, after which the explanation
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gets terribly difficult.
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Based on that explanation, here's another way to look at your balance
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report: Every negative figure means that that account or person or
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report: every negative figure means that that account or person or
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place has less money now than when you started your ledger; and every
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positive figure means that that account or person or place has more
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money now that when you started your ledger. Make sense?
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@ -612,7 +612,7 @@ P 2004/06/21 02:18:02 AAPL $32.91
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By default, ledger will not consider commodity prices when generating
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its various reports. It will always report balances in terms of the
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commodity total, rather than the current value of those commodities.
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To enable pricing reports, three options are possible:
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To enable pricing reports, several options are possible:
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**-P FILE** ::
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With this option, or if the environment variable =PRICE_HIST= is
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@ -730,7 +730,7 @@ of your assets is greater than the absolute value of your starting
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equity, it means you are making money.
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Clear as mud? Keep thinking about it. Until you figure it out, put
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"-- -Equity" at the end of your balance command, to remove the
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"=-- -Equity=" at the end of your balance command, to remove the
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confusing figure from the totals.
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** Dealing with cash
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