It can't, because if b is 0 the function would have
returned already; since b.m_hi is 0 b.m_lo can't be. The assert
reassures clang that this is the case.
We need to compare the magnitudes of the remainder and the denominator
in order to round negative numbers correctly. Note that while gnc_numeric
is constrained to a positive denominator the C++ rounding functions cannot
assume that constraint in all cases.
Combined with the previous commit, this fixes
Bug 796949 - Incorrect conversion of 0,01 USD to EUR
So that the returned price tuple has the two commodities of interest
converted to a common currency. Before the first pair that that shared
any random currency would be returned, perhaps creating an absurd result.
This function complements gnc_time64_get_day_begin/end. There was
time64CanonicalDayTime but this returned noon of the given day, where we
want 10:59am in most cases. I haven't changed time64CanonicalDayTime
directly as that may break assumptions in other parts of the code.
Instead I have created a new function that can be gradually introduced.
Use a variant of xaccParseAmount that allows to ignore the locale's positive_sign character
or the + sign if locale doesn't define a positive_sign character.
In a future redesign it would probably be better to replace use
of xaccParseAmount with some variant of the gnc-expression-parser
but that would require more that a few tweaks to get right.
date-posted to not be saved.
Check the stored GDate for being in the GncDateTime range as well
as the GDate range before returning it and check trans->date-posted
against INT64_MAX instead of 0 before changing it.
The first fix for this bug handled structs tm with ambiguous times.
This one fixes the GncDate constructor when the time is ambiguous
because it's in the DST-change hour, using the same add 3 hours,
construct the LDT, and subtract the 3 hours from the result.
The string constructor handles only simple-offset HH:MM timezones and so
is immune to the bug.
When the preference dialogue is loaded and options are set, the ones
with registered callbacks fire causing parts of Gnucash to be updated.
This was observed with gnc_split_register_load being executed 5 times
for each open register when the preference dialogue was loaded.
To overcome this, a couple of functions have been created to block and
unblock all registered prefs and used while the preference dialogue is
loaded.
And don't ask to save a not-dirty or empty book, fixing
Bug 794870 - If no book is opened, gnucash still asks if the user wants
to save changes when opening a file
These are queried continuously by the owner tree view (on Customer/Vendor/Employee
Overview pages) and recalculating them is an expensive operation.
The cache will be invalidated each time a lot reated to the owner
changes (modify or delete). The net effect is a huge responsiveness
improvement of said overviews in case of a large book.
Any operation that can overflow will throw an underflow if it's a
negative number. The C interface needs to catch both to prevent
unhandled exception crashes,
That is let the percentage increase gradually. The current granularity is still
very rough, but at least it gives an indication of getting closer to fully
loading the data. The previous configuration on the other hand only suggested
something was happening but with no indication where in the load process
gnucash was.
This prevents calling xaccAccountRecomputeBalanceInCurrency on each split that gets added,
which was exponentially increasing load times. On a huge test book the
load time dropped from 53 minutes to 1m20s.