I need help

Daniel Trezub daniel3ub at gmail.com
Sat Apr 10 10:26:35 EDT 2010


Do you mean for example buying a shirt for you and another one for your
friend at the same store at the same time, but paying 30% in cash and the
other 70% in credit card?

=====
Daniel Trezub
http://www.gameblogs.com.br


On 10 April 2010 09:38, Mike or Penny Novack <stepbystepfarm at mtdata.com>wrote:

>
>         Credit Expenses->Entertainment
>>        Credit Expenses->Groceries
>>        Credit Expenses->Household
>>                Debit Assets->Current->Checking
>>
>> That's a three-way split. The sum of the Credits must equal the Debit.
>> If you try to complicate the matter by trying to do an additional split in
>> one of the Credit registers you will only be wasting your time. If the
>> transactions all happened on the same day with the same payment (whether it
>> be an expense or an income), do it all here in this one transaction.
>>
>> Effectively, you can split a payment into as many accounts as there are
>> pennies in the amount.
>> --
>> John Carter
>>
>>
> Just to make clearer what I have been saying:
>
> To me that is a simple "one side" split. A single credit is being balanced
> by some number of  debits (yes, I switched the example around). When I refer
> to a "two way" split I mean a transaction where BOTH the credit side and the
> debit side of the transaction involve multiple accounts.
>
> Michael
>
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