On Thu, 2004-07-22 at 19:16, D. D. Brierton wrote: > On Wed, 2004-07-21 at 20:32, D. D. Brierton wrote: > > On Wed, 2004-07-21 at 20:25, J.L. Coenders wrote: > > > Hi, > > > Can any of you recommend a good accounting application for Linux? I want to > > > try doing the accounting of my company with something more advanced than a > > > spreadsheet. > > > I am looking for a program which is able to use the European/Dutch manner of > > > accounting, balance sheets, etc. etc. > > > > GnuCash? It comes with Fedora Core, and if you installed it it's under > > Applications -> Office. > > Perhaps you haven't had a chance to look over the various responses you > got to your original question, so please don't take this as a personal > rebuke, but it would be helpful if, when people post a question to the > list, and get several responses, that they then reply to those responses > and indicate which of them were helpful and whether they solved their > problem. The list archive is a valuable resource. I, for one, would like > to know whether my response ("try GnuCash") was helpful because at some > point I am going to have to start evaluating GnuCash for my own needs, > which aren't too dissimilar to yours. That's the way it works: people > ask questions, others try to be helpful, and sometimes learn something > themselves if they are told that their answer really was helpful. > > So, in general, if you post a question to this list and someone's answer > was genuinely helpful then please let the rest of us know. It's not > about politeness (that could be done off list) but about building a > valuable resource (the list archive). > > Best, Darren > Darren I personally use gnucash for my home checkbook/bank account management. However, for business accounting needs I use SQL-Ledger, as it is a much better package for all the needs of a business. HTH Jeff