| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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[skip ci]
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Fixes #2049
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Fixes:
Error: boost::bad_format_string: format-string is ill-formed
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[ci skip]
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[ci skip]
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[ci skip]
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and all boost serialisation related code.
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The following script makes it a no-brainer:
% NEXT_YEAR=2015; ag -l 'Copyright.*Wiegley' \
| xargs sed -i '' -e "s/\(Copyright.*\)-20[0-9]\{2\}/\1-${NEXT_YEAR}/"
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This isn't being used yet, but it likely will to improve the information
presented to users if their value expressions fail to compile or
evaluate.
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Now when the Y directive sets the current year for a region, it affects
everything, as if the clock really were set back to that year.
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These can occur in many places:
; Within an automated transaction, the assert is evaluated every time
; a posting is matched, with the expression context set to the
; matching posting.
= /Food/
assert account("Expenses:Food").total >= $100
2010-06-12 Sample
Expenses:Food $100
Assets:Checking
; At file scope, the expression is evaluated with "global" scope.
assert account("Expenses:Food").total == $100
; At the top of a transction, the assertion's scope is the
; transaction. After a posting, the scope is that posting. Note
; however that account totals are only adjusted after successful
; parsing of a transaction, which means that all the assertions below
; are true, even though it appears as though the middle posting should
; affect the total immediately (which is not the case).
2010-06-12 Sample 2
assert account("Expenses:Food").total == $100
Expenses:Food $50
assert account("Expenses:Food").total == $100
Assets:Checking
assert account("Expenses:Food").total == $100
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For example, consider the following automated transaction:
= /Food/
; Next Date:: date + 10
(Expenses:Tax) 1.00
; Next Date:: date + 20
This will add a metadata field named 'Next Date' to the _matching
posting_, with a value that is 10 days later than that posting. It will
also generate a new posting for that transaction, whose amount is the
same as the matching posting. Further, it will add a 'Next Date'
metadata tag to the _generated posting_ whose value is 20 days later
than the date of the matching posting.
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This gains another 15% for the parser, again with a very simple change
that has no impact if the fast predicate matcher fails to work.
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This reduces parsing time in the optimized build by 25%, and was a safe,
easy patch. If the "quick predicate evaluator" fails, we disable it
from that point on go back to what the standard code does.
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This way you cannot violate the balancing rules, not even by adding a
stray posting via an automated transaction.
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This was from an earlier time, when it was intended to be used by
Python. But it's not needed anymore.
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This allows for value expressions to be used which reference the
incoming posting, for example:
= Income:Clients:
(Liabilities:Taxes:VAT1) (floor(amount) * 1)
(Liabilities:Taxes:VAT2) 0.19
2009/07/27 * Invoice
Assets:Bank:Checking $1,190.45
Income:Clients:ACME_Inc
The automated posting for VAT1 will use the floored amount multiplied by
a factor, while the posting for VAT2 multiples the whole amount as
before.
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The different namespaces are:
Function Value expression functions, which receive a "context"
Option Command-line options
Precommand Commands which are invoked before reading the journal
Command Commands which are invoked after reading the journal
Directive Directives that occur at column 0 in a data file
This greatly eases the ability for Python uses to add intercept hooks to
change how the basic Ledger module functions. An example of what should
be possible soon:
import ledger
def my_foo_handler(value):
print "--foo received:", value
ledger.add_handler(ledger.Option, "foo=", my_foo_handler)
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This allows journal_t objects to be completed serialized to disk and
deserialized.
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