remove RAW-NOTES

git-svn-id: svn+ssh://svn.gnucash.org/repo/gnucash/trunk@11853 57a11ea4-9604-0410-9ed3-97b8803252fd
This commit is contained in:
Neil Williams 2005-11-06 13:16:09 +00:00
parent 2dca39c0e9
commit 7add4d3c08
3 changed files with 9 additions and 86 deletions

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@ -39,7 +39,7 @@ EXTRA_DIST = \
## the sed substitutions.
gnc-prices.1: gnc-prices.1.in
rm -f $@.tmp
sed < $< > $@.tmp \
${SED} < $< > $@.tmp \
-e 's:@-VERSION-@:${VERSION}:g' \
-e 's:@-DATE-@:$(shell date +'%B %Y'):g'
chmod +x $@.tmp
@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ gnc-prices.1: gnc-prices.1.in
gnucash.1: gnucash.1.in
rm -f $@.tmp
sed < $< > $@.tmp \
${SED} < $< > $@.tmp \
-e 's:@-VERSION-@:${VERSION}:g' \
-e 's:@-DATE-@:$(shell date +'%B %Y'):g'
chmod +x $@.tmp
@ -55,7 +55,7 @@ gnucash.1: gnucash.1.in
tip_of_the_day.list: tip_of_the_day.list.in
gcc -E -P -x c -D'N_(x)=x' -o $@.tmp $<
cat -s $@.tmp | sed -e 's/^ *\"\(.*\)\" *$$/\1/m' > $@
cat -s $@.tmp | ${SED} -e 's/^ *\"\(.*\)\" *$$/\1/m' > $@
rm -f $@.tmp
DISTCLEANFILES = gnc-prices.1 gnucash.1 tip_of_the_day.list

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@ -1,82 +0,0 @@
/** \page rawnotes Miscellaneous Notes.
\section stock splits & cost basis
OK, here's a question for accountants of various different countries:
What's the cost basis for a stock split? Does the rest of the world do
it the way the US does it?
For example:
In Jan 1995 buy 100s stock for $10 per share
In July 1997 split 2-for-1
In August 1997, sell 120s stock for $30 per share
I believe the following is correct for the united states:
My cost basis is $5 per share, and my gains of $25x120 are taxable
as long-term cap gains.
--- would there ever be a case where the cost basis should be $10 for
the first 100 shares, and $0 for the remainder?
--- would there ever be a case where the gains would be considered
'short-term' for some portion of the total?
\subsection Spin off stocks.
OK, that was easy. Here's the harder one: a spin-off:
For example:
In Jan 1995 buy 100s of stock A for $10 per share
In July 1997 receive 1s of stock B for every 20s of stock A.
Stock B is new, and will trade under its own new ticker symbol
as of the date of this split.
-- What's my cost basis for B? is it $0.000 ?
-- What's my cost basis for A? is it $10, or something else?
-- Are these questions supposed to be answered by company A,
or do I just 'guess'?
Note there is still an invarient:
(old price of A) * 20s == (new price of A) *20s + (price of B) * 1s
\section Depreciation, Sinking Funds ...
On 21 Apr 2000 20:39:43 CDT, the world broke into rejoicing as
John Hasler <john@dhh.gt.org> said:
\verbatim
> Lauren writes:
> > I'm not familliar with sinking funds, but what makes them a bit different
> > from a book entry like depreciation (also somewhat virtual) is that they
> > are happening with real accounts that need to be reconciled against an
> > outside statement.
>
> I don't see that. While the purpose of a sinking fund may be to pay off
> some bonds in ten years and there may even exist a legal obligation to have
> it, the funds being transferred to it now have nothing to do with any
> outside statement.
>
> A sinking fund to pay off some bonds is pretty much the same thing as
> saving up to pay off the balloon payment on the morgage.
>
> When you transfer funds to your "Savings Goal" or your "Sinking Fund" you
> are transferring funds from one asset account to another. Just credit
> 'Cash' and debit 'Savings Goals:Honeymoon'.
\endvarbatim
The problem with proceeding to credit Cash and debit "Savings Goal" is
that this invalidates any reconciliation of Cash. I'd be game to do
this if I credited not Cash, but rather "Cash:Goals", a subaccount of
Cash that can be ignored when it needs to be,
For different purposes, I will want both to consider and ignore these
"funds reservations."
- When making up a <b>budget</b>, I care about what funds are reserved for
particular purposes.
- When trying to figure out if my bank account is going to be
overdrawn, "reserved" funds are <b>irrelevant.</b>
I would thus suggest that the "gentle user" use the budget system to
manage this rather than having these be "true" transactions in the
ledger.
*/

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@ -14,7 +14,8 @@ possible, if you make a mistake when working on the Makefile.am's to
leave yourself in a situation where automake won't work because a
Makefile is broken. To fix this, just run:
./autogen.sh <your usual arguments to ./configure>
./autogen.sh
./configure <your usual options>
That should sledgehammer the problem bit back into place.
@ -57,6 +58,10 @@ according to the following rule:
This approach guarantees that the variables referred to will be
properly expanded at the right times.
Note that on OSX, you MUST have the GNU version of sed installed
via fink - the BSD version installed by default will not work with
some of the substitution operators used in the gnucash build.
The only non-Makefiles files that must be handled directly by
AC_OUTPUT are files that refer to variables that, when expanded, may
have makefile-hostile characters like '#' in them like