=2D----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 What I don't like about gnucash, and admittedly it's because I really don't= =20 know how to use it, but I realy wanted to use financial something! for my=20 finances. Anyway, if I click on my income account, type in a description, then add $3= 00=20 to the income field, it gives me a window saying: "The current transaction is not balanced. [ ] Balance it manually [ ] Let GnuCash add an adjusting split [x] Adjust current account split total " If I select the "adjust current account split total" everything disappears.= It=20 still shows the transaction, but no money involved. If I select the "Let=20 GnuCash add an adjusting split" the same thing happens. If I select Balance= =20 it manually, I get a whole bunch of negatives everywhere and nothing makes= =20 sense. I'm running version 1.6.8 I also have 1.4 (not installed) and that one works grand, but I wanted all = the=20 new flashy things, and it's not working for me!! lol Am I doing something horribly wrong or what? nathan Am Freitag 31 Januar 2003 02:55 nachmittags/abends schrieb Carl Parrish: > On Fri, 2003-01-31 at 06:46, Vaughn Treude wrote: > > My two cents again: > > I'd also like to try GnuCash. I use QuickBooks right now, but the most > > annoying thing (other than the fact that it runs in Windows) is that th= ey > > keep trying to wring extra money out of you. Every year there's a new > > set of tax tables, and they're not cheap. And they're always pushing n= ew > > versions and changing the file formats. I got tired of paying for the > > new tax tables - since I'm my company's only employee, it was a small > > convenience. I finally just took the IRS Employers' Guide and used it = to > > do a spreadsheet to calculate my withholding, then I'd enter all those > > figures in manually. I would've already converted to GnuCash, but the = QB > > file formats are different than Quicken's, and the last time I checked, > > there were no converters for QB's files. If I can ever make the time, > > maybe I'll look into working on that myself. > > > > Vaughn Treude > > I'm using GNUCash I *love* it. If you're looking for a replacement for > quicken I'd say easy. If you're a quickbooks user....I'd say depends. > 1.8 should be released sometime next week. But gnucash is *hard* to > install. Its like all the nightmares people associate with installing on > Linux. For me it was worth learning how though. With the new Account > Payable / Account Receivable accounts. The invoice / bill druid and the > scheduled transactions. It has now become the only finance tool I need > (oh did I mention that you can connect it to gnuTimeTracker to auto > create Invoices?). Its great but its not an out of the box solution. I > *often* need to pull in support from CVS. For instance I *think* > Quickbooks can export in OFX format. And if you have the OFX library > installed Gnucash can read that but you have to compile support for it > in. So if you like playing with code, by all means get gnucash. If not > you may want to wait till your distro has the features you need. =2D --=20 Nathan England Arcanum Linux ! nathan at the-arcanum.org jabber id: linuxjunkie@jabber.earth.li "A free society is one where it is safe to be unpopular." =2D --Adlai Stevenson Registered Linux User #189789, Machine #106603 www.sincerechoice.org Spam related material will be forwarded to: uce@ftc.gov =2D----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.7 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQE+PBW8Q7yNnsYcupwRAgW2AJ9Nyl2lV8PclJhQo6k6Ou1CMRXMFQCgqqMz ZTW1ofxv9NKe7QDVkSUWy9E=3D =3DLO6M =2D----END PGP SIGNATURE-----