Prøve GULL - Gratis
Tracking your finances with plain text accounting Plain Numbers
Linux Magazine
|#285/August 2024: Kernel Exploits
If you're tired of tinkering with spreadsheets, using hledger and plain text accounting offers a simpler method for managing your finances without vendor lock-in

Accounting or bookkeeping may look like black magic to nonprofessionals, but its most basic forms are less obscure than you might think. A good accounting system can save money, trouble, and time – even if you are just trying to get your personal finances under control. In this tutorial, I will explain a simple accounting technique, plain text accounting (PTA), and introduce you to hledger, one of the most popular open source PTA tools.
What Is PTA?
In double-entry accounting, every change in the state of the system is a dated movement of money (or whatever else is being accounted for) between at least one source and one destination, and the sum of all those movements equals zero. Double-entry accounting has been around for centuries because its “balanced” transactions are a great, self-enforcing, easy-to-code way to guarantee that no money ever enters or leaves the system unexplained. In double-entry accounting, money is usually inside three main types of accounts: assets (what you own), liabilities (what you owe), and equity, plus two other categories devoted to revenues and expenses. Each account can be subdivided in multiple levels of sub-accounts according to your needs.
Denne historien er fra #285/August 2024: Kernel Exploits-utgaven av Linux Magazine.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Linux Magazine
Linux Magazine
Exercise Place
The GRUB 2 boot manager might seem intimidating at first glance. All the more reason to spin up a virtual playground so you can practice.
10 mins
#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio
Linux Magazine
Terminal Mosaic
What's better than one command line? Many command lines that never die. Take the terminal to new places with Zellij.
9 mins
#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Linux Magazine
MakerSpace
Build a Long-Range Sensor Network with ChirpStack Sensor Symphony
14 mins
#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Linux Magazine
How Flatpak, AppImage, and Snap are changing software distribution Ship It!
Modern-day package systems solve some problems posed by classic formats like DEB and RPM. We look at Flatpak, AppImage, and Snap and describe how they differ.
12 mins
#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Linux Magazine
Dashboard Delight
Simplify the chaos of self-hosted services with Homepage, a customizable dashboard with widgets that put service statistics at your fingertips.
9 mins
#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Linux Magazine
MADDOG'S DOGHOUSE
Free software, and the FOSS community, can help technology students get the education they desire in Brazil and elsewhere.
3 mins
#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Linux Magazine
Rethinking the Terminal
The Warp AI agent takes the guesswork out of working at the command line. We show you how to build a simple website with one prompt.
4 mins
#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio
Linux Magazine
Just in Time
Just is a command runner that lets you define project-specific tasks in a declarative justfile.
7 mins
#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Linux Magazine
The Watcher
This versatile security app checks for vulnerabilities, watches logs, and acts as a single interface for other tools.
7 mins
#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio

Linux Magazine
NO INTERNETREQUIRED
This new utility lets you update a system that is notconnected to the Internet.
4 mins
#298/September 2025: Indie Game Studio
Listen
Translate
Change font size