Hi!
I again have a problem which for me first occured at the end of last years book keeping.
The problem is that for some reason, some of my split transactions are not showing in the account statement in iCash. (More background below.) This is very annoying since I use the account statement in iCash to compare with the account statement in my bank.
The split transaction that is not showing is an income. I use a "loan" account to keep track of expenses in my work that I will get money for on my next paycheck. This way, my income and expenses are not affected by the amount of job expenses I have. And when all job expenses are corrected, the loan balance account should be zero.
Therefore, the total amount in my paycheck consists of normal salary and some amount corresponding to my job expenses. In iCash these two transactions are created using a split on the total amount on the paycheck.
When I had this problem at the end of last year (when I began to keep track of my job expenses this way), I was given the advice that my database somehow had become corrupt. (Eventhough diagnostic tool and recreation of database did not solve the problem.)
New year, and new iCash database seemed to handle the problem; I have successfully created a split transaction this way that shows on the account statement in iCash. But this month, the latest paycheck transaction did now show up in the account statement in iCash! Very strange, since the one from last month did.
I've again tried the diagnostic tool and recreate tools in iCash. I've also tried deleting a lot of transactions; and at some point the transaction magically appeared in the account statement. When trying to pin point which transaction that was causing the problem, I was not able to do it again. (I deliberately deleted the transactions in a different order.)
I feel that this has to be a bug of some kind; if it has something to do with the amount of transaction, my locale (swedish), operating system (win 7 x64), or what I don't know.
Appreciate all help possible!
Kind regards
I again have a problem which for me first occured at the end of last years book keeping.
The problem is that for some reason, some of my split transactions are not showing in the account statement in iCash. (More background below.) This is very annoying since I use the account statement in iCash to compare with the account statement in my bank.
The split transaction that is not showing is an income. I use a "loan" account to keep track of expenses in my work that I will get money for on my next paycheck. This way, my income and expenses are not affected by the amount of job expenses I have. And when all job expenses are corrected, the loan balance account should be zero.
Therefore, the total amount in my paycheck consists of normal salary and some amount corresponding to my job expenses. In iCash these two transactions are created using a split on the total amount on the paycheck.
When I had this problem at the end of last year (when I began to keep track of my job expenses this way), I was given the advice that my database somehow had become corrupt. (Eventhough diagnostic tool and recreation of database did not solve the problem.)
New year, and new iCash database seemed to handle the problem; I have successfully created a split transaction this way that shows on the account statement in iCash. But this month, the latest paycheck transaction did now show up in the account statement in iCash! Very strange, since the one from last month did.
I've again tried the diagnostic tool and recreate tools in iCash. I've also tried deleting a lot of transactions; and at some point the transaction magically appeared in the account statement. When trying to pin point which transaction that was causing the problem, I was not able to do it again. (I deliberately deleted the transactions in a different order.)
I feel that this has to be a bug of some kind; if it has something to do with the amount of transaction, my locale (swedish), operating system (win 7 x64), or what I don't know.
Appreciate all help possible!
Kind regards