"Action" tab

jraehl at raehls.org jraehl at raehls.org
Thu Oct 15 06:08:45 EDT 2009


The recent discussion was about rigging the numbers to order within a day.  My own scheme is to use 4-digit numbers for deposits and ATM transactions, and 5-digit numbers for checks.  Gnucash sorts first on day, then num.  Thus, my deposits always appear first in the day.

For matching bank post date and Gnucash, I initially specify a date sometime in the future, such as end of month or even end of year.  I add the transaction date to the end of the payee description.  Thus: Smith's Grocery (10/15/09).  When the check clears the bank, I change the date to the actual posting date and remove the date from the description.  Thus, the data at current date and prior matches the bank.

I think that transaction date should have been designed into Gnucash at the start.  Seems like commercial use of Gnucash would require that.  Otherwise, there is no database date to prove that the transaction occurred on time, but was posted late.  Which really happened for my storage shed monthly payment, which was entered a month late.  Fortunately, I had the dated receipt.

My own copy of Gnucash has a transaction date field, which borrows the entry date (which is normally not visible or editable, but which I consider to be useless for personal finances).  I could submit a bug and patch with my changes, but the probability that would be accepted is zero.

Jim Raehl

> Maf. King wrote:
>> I too use the NUM field for Check Number, or I enter DD for a direct debit 
>> etc.  ISTR that the recent thread was about using the NUM field to force txns 
>> to appear in a particular order in the register.

> Am I correct in understanding that using the NUM field to control 
> ordering would only occur in the context of a single day's transactions?

> -- Tom
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