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ed3cc5c907
1 changed files with 11 additions and 11 deletions
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@ -2693,7 +2693,7 @@ doing it.
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* Total posting costs::
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* Virtual posting costs::
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* Commodity prices::
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* Prices vs. costs::
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* Prices versus costs::
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* Fixated prices and costs::
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* Lot dates::
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* Lot notes::
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@ -3296,7 +3296,7 @@ happening in the case of an exceptional transaction, surround the
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Income:Gifts Received
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@end smallexample
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@node Commodity prices, Prices vs. costs, Virtual posting costs, Transactions
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@node Commodity prices, Prices versus costs, Virtual posting costs, Transactions
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@section Commodity prices
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@findex --lot-prices
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@ -3424,8 +3424,8 @@ And in cases where the amounts do not divide into whole figures and
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must be rounded, the capital gains figure could be off by a cent. Use
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with caution.
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@node Prices vs. costs, Fixated prices and costs, Commodity prices, Transactions
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@section Prices vs. costs
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@node Prices versus costs, Fixated prices and costs, Commodity prices, Transactions
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@section Prices versus costs
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Because lot pricing provides enough information to infer the cost, the
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following two transactions are equivalent:
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@ -3445,7 +3445,7 @@ example in the print report. Functionally, however, there is no
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difference, and neither the register nor the balance report are
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sensitive to this difference.
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@node Fixated prices and costs, Lot dates, Prices vs. costs, Transactions
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@node Fixated prices and costs, Lot dates, Prices versus costs, Transactions
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@section Fixated prices and costs
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If you buy a stock last year, and ask for its value today, Ledger will
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@ -3476,7 +3476,7 @@ fixated prices by way of the cost:
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@end smallexample
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This is the same as the previous transaction, with the same caveats
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found in @ref{Prices vs. costs}.
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found in @ref{Prices versus costs}.
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@node Lot dates, Lot notes, Fixated prices and costs, Transactions
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@section Lot dates
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@ -8458,13 +8458,13 @@ make sense later.
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@menu
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* Basic data traversal::
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* Raw vs. Cooked::
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* Raw versus Cooked::
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* Queries::
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* Embedded Python::
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* Amounts::
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@end menu
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@node Basic data traversal, Raw vs. Cooked, Extending with Python, Extending with Python
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@node Basic data traversal, Raw versus Cooked, Extending with Python, Extending with Python
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@section Basic data traversal
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Every interaction with Ledger happens in the context of a Session.
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@ -8491,8 +8491,8 @@ for xact in ledger.read_journal("sample.dat").xacts:
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print "Transferring %s to/from %s" % (post.amount, post.account)
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@end smallexample
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@node Raw vs. Cooked, Queries, Basic data traversal, Extending with Python
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@section Raw vs. Cooked
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@node Raw versus Cooked, Queries, Basic data traversal, Extending with Python
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@section Raw versus Cooked
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Ledger data exists in one of two forms: raw and cooked. Raw objects are
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what you get from a traversal like the above, and represent exactly what
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@ -8556,7 +8556,7 @@ does it transaction-wise. It relies on the fact that an unsorted report
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returns postings in the exact order they were parsed from the journal
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file.
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@node Queries, Embedded Python, Raw vs. Cooked, Extending with Python
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@node Queries, Embedded Python, Raw versus Cooked, Extending with Python
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@section Queries
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The Journal.query() method accepts every argument you can specify on the
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