RedButterFly wrote:Toxicity wrote:GNU Cash can be useful
Have you used it? What may be the challenges and advantages. It seems relatively new to me.
I've used GNUCash and would recommend it. It works very well for me. I especially like that you can schedule transactions and enter new transactions based on similar ones from the past. It is also very customizable and provides a wide array of useful reports/statements. Plus it's absolutely free and open source.
The only downside I can think of is that the UI is not particularly beautiful. The emphasis is on function rather than looks. I have to say though that the charts since the last update have improved immensely.
Also, although you can use it with a flat file (XML), connecting it to a database (such as MySQL or PostgreSQL) is a much better choice from a robustness, scalability and data security perspective. This is trivial if you are tech savvy but can be a bit intimidating for other people.
Disclaimer: I am not really
comparing GNUCash to anything else out there. GNUCash was the first accounting software I used and I fell in love with it. Been using it about 3 years now. So there is a chance that this is a case of "he who does not travel believing that only his mother knows how to cook good food".
Learn first to treat your time as you would your money, then treat your money as you do your time.