General Journal

Derek Atkins warlord at MIT.EDU
Fri Aug 9 14:19:07 EDT 2013


<cgw993 at aol.com> writes:

> On the import field, they don’t call them debits and credits, they
> call them deposits and withdrawals unless I missed something.  Does
> debit = deposit, and credit=withdrawal?

In the case of a Bank Account (or other Asset), yes, a debit == deposit
== increase in the account (and a credit == withdrawal == decrease).

You may be surprised to learn that most people don't really understand
debits and credits, and indeed most who think they do get it wrong.
Most people learn the terms from their monthly bank statements, and
those are "backwards" (they are from the Bank's view of your account,
which is a Liability to them).  Indeed, it took me YEARS to unlearn that
misunderstanding.  So yes, "Deposit" and "Withdrawal" are much more
useful to the average person.

As already mentioned in a previous email, if you want to use Debit and
Credit you can set the preferences to do so via Edit -> Preferences ->
Accounts and select "Use formal accounting labels".

As for the Ledger vs Journal discussion, the whole ledger/journal
dichotomy only makes sense in the pen&ink old-school method.  When
everything was pen&ink you didn't have time to push everything into all
your different accounts in real-time, so you just recorded the
transactions as they occur and then later you post them to the relevant
accounts.

While it's useful to understand WHY it was done that way historically,
it makes no sense to do it that way when using a computer program.  The
reason it makes no sense is that when you enter a transaction it can
automatically get posted to all the ledgers and journals necessary,
immediately, in a single step, regardless of where in the program the
transaction was entered.  There's no reason to delay the posting until
the end of the day, or to force the user to make the migration manually.
That's the power of computers, reducing that workload.  So you can enter
the transaction from any account register and supply all the debits and
credits, or you can enter it from what GnuCash called the General Ledger
(although technically it's possibly a misnomer and should be called the
General Journal), or you can enter it from the "Transfer Dialog"..
Whichever floats your boat.

I hope this helps,

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-derek

-- 
       Derek Atkins, SB '93 MIT EE, SM '95 MIT Media Laboratory
       Member, MIT Student Information Processing Board  (SIPB)
       URL: http://web.mit.edu/warlord/    PP-ASEL-IA     N1NWH
       warlord at MIT.EDU                        PGP key available



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