r17847 - gnucash-docs/trunk/guide/C - Bug #568244: Typos in Tutorial and Concepts Guide
Christian Stimming
cstim at cvs.gnucash.org
Wed Jan 28 15:48:16 EST 2009
Author: cstim
Date: 2009-01-28 15:48:16 -0500 (Wed, 28 Jan 2009)
New Revision: 17847
Trac: http://svn.gnucash.org/trac/changeset/17847
Modified:
gnucash-docs/trunk/guide/C/ch_cc.xml
Log:
Bug #568244: Typos in Tutorial and Concepts Guide
Patch by Matt Kraai.
Modified: gnucash-docs/trunk/guide/C/ch_cc.xml
===================================================================
--- gnucash-docs/trunk/guide/C/ch_cc.xml 2009-01-28 20:48:09 UTC (rev 17846)
+++ gnucash-docs/trunk/guide/C/ch_cc.xml 2009-01-28 20:48:16 UTC (rev 17847)
@@ -58,7 +58,7 @@
bank account and a credit card account to enter your transactions.</para>
<para>The charges you make on your credit card are expenses, so you will
- have to setup these accounts under the top-level account called
+ have to set up these accounts under the top-level account called
"Expenses". If you decide to keep a more detailed records of your
purchases, you will need to create expense accounts for each kind of
purchase you make. Since you will also be reconciling the balance to your
@@ -70,7 +70,7 @@
<title>Simple Setup</title>
<para>If you do not want to track each expense made on the credit card,
- you can setup a simple account hierarchy like this:</para>
+ you can set up a simple account hierarchy like this:</para>
<literallayout>
-Assets
@@ -90,14 +90,14 @@
<para>The obvious limitation of this simple credit card setup is that
you cannot see where your money is going. All your credit card expenses
are being entered in the Credit Card expense account. This is, however,
- very simple to setup and maintain.</para>
+ very simple to set up and maintain.</para>
</sect2>
<sect2 id="cc-accounts-complete2">
<title>Complete Setup</title>
<para>If you want to track your expenses more completely, you should
- setup multiple expense accounts named for the various kinds of expenses
+ set up multiple expense accounts named for the various kinds of expenses
you have. Each charge on your credit card is then entered as a separate
transaction between your Credit Card liability account and a specific
expense account. Below is an example of an account hierarchy for
@@ -192,8 +192,8 @@
refund.</para>
</note>
- <para>To clarify this, lets run through an example. You bought some Jeans
- for $74.99 on your VISA card, but realized 1 day later that they are to
+ <para>To clarify this, let's run through an example. You bought some jeans
+ for $74.99 on your VISA card, but realized one day later that they are too
big and want to return them. The shop gracefully agrees, and refunds your
credit card.</para>
More information about the gnucash-changes
mailing list