@c -*-texinfo-*- @section Cookbook @subsection Invoking Ledger @example ledger --group-by "tag('trip')" bal legder reg --sort "tag('foo')" %foo ledger cleared VWCU NFCU Tithe Misentry ledger register Joint --uncleared ledger register NFCUChecking --sort d -d 'd>[2011/04/01]' until 2011/05/25 @end example @subsection Ledger Files @example = /^Income:Taxable/ (Liabilities:Tithe Owed) -0.1 = /Noah/ (Liabilities:Tithe Owed) -0.1 = /Jonah/ (Liabilities:Tithe Owed) -0.1 = /Tithe/ (Liabilities:Tithe Owed) -1.0 @end example @section Quick Reference This chapter describes @ledgerprog's features and serves as a quick reference. You may wish to survey this to get an overview before diving in to the @ref{Ledger Tutorial} and more detailed examples that follow. @ledgerprog@ has a very simple command-line interface, named---enticingly enough---@command{ledger}. It supports a few reporting commands, and a large number of options for refining the output from those commands. The basic syntax of any ledger command is: @example ledger [OPTIONS...] COMMAND [ARGS...] @end example Command options must always precede the command word. After the command word there may appear any number of arguments. For most commands, these arguments are regular expressions that cause the output to relate only to postings matching those regular expressions. For the @command{transaction} command, the arguments have a special meaning, described below. The regular expressions arguments always match the account name that a posting refers to. To match on the payee of the transaction instead, precede the regular expression with @samp{--}. For example, the following balance command reports account totals for rent, food and movies, but only those whose payee matches Freddie: @example ledger bal rent food movies -- freddie @end example There are many, many command options available with the @command{ledger} command, and it takes a while to master them. However, none of them are required to use the basic reporting commands. @menu * Commands:: * Options:: * Period expressions:: * Format strings:: * Value expressions:: * File format:: @end menu @node Commands, Options, Quick Reference, Quick Reference @section Commands @subsection balance The @command{balance} command reports the current balance of all accounts. It accepts a list of optional regexps, which confine the balance report to the matching accounts. If an account contains multiple types of commodities, each commodity's total is reported separately. @subsection register The @command{register} command displays all the postings occurring in a single account, line by line. The account regexp must be specified as the only argument to this command. If any regexps occur after the required account name, the register will contain only those postings that match. Very useful for hunting down a particular posting. The output from @command{register} is very close to what a typical checkbook, or single-account ledger, would look like. It also shows a running balance. The final running balance of any register should always be the same as the current balance of that account. If you have Gnuplot installed, you may plot the amount or running total of any register by using the script @file{report}, which is included in the @ledgerprog@ distribution. The only requirement is that you add either @option{-j} or @option{-J} to your register command, in order to plot either the amount or total column, respectively. @subsection print The @command{print} command prints out ledger transactions in a textual format that can be parsed by @ledgerprog@. They will be properly formatted, and output in the most economic form possible. The ``print'' command also takes a list of optional regexps, which will cause only those postings which match in some way to be printed. The @command{print} command can be a handy way to clean up a ledger file whose formatting has gotten out of hand. @subsection output The @command{output} command is very similar to the @command{print} command, except that it attempts to replicate the specified ledger file exactly. The format of the command is: @example ledger -f FILENAME output FILENAME @end example Where @file{FILENAME} is the name of the ledger file to output. The reason for specifying this command is that only transactions contained within that file will be output, and not an included transactions (as can happen with the @command{print} command). @subsection xml The @command{xml} command outputs results similar to what @command{print} and @command{register} display, but as an XML form. This data can then be read in and processed. Use the @option{--totals} option to include the running total with each posting. @subsection emacs The @command{emacs} command outputs results in a form that can be read directly by Emacs Lisp. The format of the sexp is: @example ((BEG-POS CLEARED DATE CODE PAYEE (ACCOUNT AMOUNT)...) ; list of postings ...) ; list of transactions @end example @subsection equity The @command{equity} command prints out accounts balances as if they were transactions. This makes it easy to establish the starting balances for an account, such as when @ref{Archiving previous years}. @subsection prices The @command{prices} command displays the price history for matching commodities. The @option{-A} flag is useful with this report, to display the running average price, or @option{-D} to show each price's deviation from that average. There is also a @command{pricesdb} command which outputs the same information as @command{prices}, but does in a format that can be parsed by @ledgerprog@. @subsection xact The @command{xact} commands simplifies the creation of new transactions. It works on the principle that 80% of all postings are variants of earlier postings. Here's how it works: Say you currently have this posting in your ledger file: @smallexample 2004/03/15 * Viva Italiano Expenses:Food $12.45 Expenses:Tips $2.55 Liabilities:MasterCard $-15.00 @end smallexample Now it's @samp{2004/4/9}, and you've just eating at @samp{Viva Italiano} again. The exact amounts are different, but the overall form is the same. With the @command{xact} command you can type: @example ledger xact 2004/4/9 viva food 11 tips 2.50 @end example This produces the following output: @smallexample 2004/04/09 Viva Italiano Expenses:Food $11.00 Expenses:Tips $2.50 Liabilities:MasterCard $-13.50 @end smallexample It works by finding a past posting matching the regular expression @samp{viva}, and assuming that any accounts or amounts specified will be similar to that earlier posting. If @ledgerprog@ does not succeed in generating a new transaction, an error is printed and the exit code is set to @samp{1}. There is a shell script in the distribution's @file{scripts} directory called @file{xact}, which simplifies the task of adding a new transaction to your ledger. It launches @command{vi} to confirm that the transaction looks appropriate. Here are a few more examples of the @command{xact} command, assuming the above journal transaction: @example ledger xact 4/9 viva 11.50 ledger xact 4/9 viva 11.50 checking # (from `checking') ledger xact 4/9 viva food 11.50 tips 8 ledger xact 4/9 viva food 11.50 tips 8 cash ledger xact 4/9 viva food $11.50 tips $8 cash ledger xact 4/9 viva dining "DM 11.50" @end example @node Options, Period expressions, Commands, Quick Reference @section Options With all of the reports, command-line options are useful to modify the output generated. These command-line options always occur before the command word. This is done to distinguish options from exclusive regular expressions, which also begin with a dash. The basic form for most commands is: @example ledger [OPTIONS] COMMAND [REGEXPS...] [-- [REGEXPS...]] @end example The @var{OPTIONS} and @var{REGEXPS} expressions are both optional. You could just use @samp{ledger balance}, without any options---which prints a summary of all accounts. But for more specific reporting, or to change the appearance of the output, options are needed. @subsection Basic options These are the most basic command options. Most likely, the user will want to set them using environment variables (see @ref{Options}), instead of using actual command-line options: @option{--help} (@option{-h}) prints a summary of all the options, and what they are used for. This can be a handy way to remember which options do what. This help screen is also printed if ledger is run without a command. @option{--version} (@option{-v}) prints the current version of ledger and exits. This is useful for sending bug reports, to let the author know which version of ledger you are using. @option{--file FILE} (@option{-f FILE}) reads FILE as a ledger file. This command may be used multiple times. Typically, the environment variable @env{LEDGER_FILE} is set, rather than using this command-line option. @option{--output FILE} (@option{-o FILE}) redirects output from any command to @var{FILE}. By default, all output goes to standard output. @option{--init-file FILE} (@option{-i FILE}) causes FILE to be read by ledger before any other ledger file. This file may not contain any postings, but it may contain option settings. To specify options in the init file, use the same syntax as the command-line, but put each option on it's own line. Here's an example init file: @smallexample --price-db ~/finance/.pricedb --cache /tmp/ledger-cache ; ~/.ledgerrc ends here @end smallexample Option settings on the command-line or in the environment always take precedence over settings in the init file. @option{--cache FILE} identifies FILE as the default binary cache file. That is, if the ledger files to be read are specified using the environment variable @env{LEDGER_FILE}, then whenever a command is finished a binary copy will be written to the specified cache, to speed up the loading time of subsequent queries. This filename can also be given using the environment variable @env{LEDGER_CACHE}, or by putting the option into your init file. The @option{--no-cache} option causes @ledgerprog@ to always ignore the binary cache. @option{--account NAME} (@option{-a NAME}) specifies the default account which QIF file postings are assumed to relate to. @subsection Report filtering These options change which postings affect the outcome of a report, in ways other than just using regular expressions: @option{--current}(@option{-c}) displays only transactions occurring on or before the current date. @option{--begin DATE} (@option{-b DATE}) constrains the report to transactions on or after @var{DATE}. Only transactions after that date will be calculated, which means that the running total in the balance report will always start at zero with the first matching transaction. (Note: This is different from using @option{--display} to constrain what is displayed). @option{--end DATE} (@option{-e DATE}) constrains the report so that transactions on or after @var{DATE} are not considered. The ending date is inclusive. @option{--period STR} (@option{-p STR}) sets the reporting period to @var{STR}. This will subtotal all matching transactions within each period separately, making it easy to see weekly, monthly, quarterly, etc., posting totals. A period string can even specify the beginning and end of the report range, using simple terms like ``last june'' or ``next month''. For more using period expressions, see @ref{Period expressions}. @option{--period-sort EXPR} sorts the postings within each reporting period using the value expression @var{EXPR}. This is most often useful when reporting monthly expenses, in order to view the highest expense categories at the top of each month: @example ledger -M --period-sort -At reg ^Expenses @end example @option{--cleared} (@option{-C}) displays only postings whose transaction has been marked ``cleared'' (by placing an asterix to the right of the date). @option{--uncleared} (@option{-U}) displays only postings whose transaction has not been marked ``cleared'' (i.e., if there is no asterix to the right of the date). @option{--real} (@option{-R}) displays only real postings, not virtual. (A virtual posting is indicated by surrounding the account name with parentheses or brackets; see the section on using virtual postings for more information). @option{--actual} (@option{-L}) displays only actual postings, and not those created due to automated postings. @option{--related} (@option{-r}) displays postings that are related to whichever postings would otherwise have matched the filtering criteria. In the register report, this shows where money went to, or the account it came from. In the balance report, it shows all the accounts affected by transactions having a related posting. For example, if a file had this transaction: @smallexample 2004/03/20 Safeway Expenses:Food $65.00 Expenses:Cash $20.00 Assets:Checking $-85.00 @end smallexample And the register command was: @example ledger -r register food @end example The following would be output, showing the postings related to the posting that matched: @smallexample 2004/03/20 Safeway Expenses:Cash $-20.00 $-20.00 Assets:Checking $85.00 $65.00 @end smallexample @option{--budget} is useful for displaying how close your postings meet your budget. @option{--add-budget} also shows unbudgeted postings, while @option{--unbudgeted} shows only those. @option{--forecast} is a related option that projects your budget into the future, showing how it will affect future balances. @xref{Budgeting and forecasting}. @option{--limit EXPR} (@option{-l EXPR}) limits which postings take part in the calculations of a report. @option{--amount EXPR} (@option{-t EXPR}) changes the value expression used to calculate the ``value'' column in the @command{register} report, the amount used to calculate account totals in the @command{balance} report, and the values printed in the @command{equity} report. @xref{Value expressions}. @option{--total EXPR} (@option{-T EXPR}) sets the value expression used for the ``totals'' column in the @command{register} and @command{balance} reports. @subsection Output customization These options affect only the output, but not which postings are used to create it: @option{--collapse} (@option{-n}) causes transactions in a @command{register} report with multiple postings to be collapsed into a single, subtotaled transaction. @option{--subtotal} (@option{-s}) causes all transactions in a @command{register} report to be collapsed into a single, subtotaled transaction. @option{--by-payee} (@option{-P}) reports subtotals by payee. @option{--comm-as-payee} (@option{-x}) changes the payee of every posting to be the commodity used in that posting. This can be useful when combined with other options, such as @option{-s}. @option{--empty} (@option{-E}) includes even empty accounts in the @command{balance} report. @option{--weekly} (@option{-W}) reports posting totals by the week. The week begins on whichever day of the week begins the month containing that posting. To set a specific begin date, use a period string, such as @samp{weekly from DATE}. @option{--monthly} (@option{-M}) reports posting totals by month; @option{--yearly} (@option{-Y}) reports posting totals by year. For more complex period, using the @option{--period} option described above. @option{--dow} reports postings totals for each day of the week. This is an easy way to see if weekend spending is more than on weekdays. @option{--sort EXPR} (@option{-S EXPR}) sorts a report by comparing the values determined using the value expression @var{EXPR}. For example, using @option{-S -UT} in the balance report will sort account balances from greatest to least, using the absolute value of the total. For more on how to use value expressions, see @ref{Value expressions}. @option{--wide} (@option{-w}) causes the default @command{register} report to assume 132 columns instead of 80. @option{--head} causes only the first N transactions to be printed. This is different from using the command-line utility @command{head}, which would limit to the first N postings. @option{--tail} outputs only the last N transactions. Both options may be used simultaneously. If a negative amount is given, it will invert the meaning of the flag (instead of the first five transactions being printed, for example, it would print all but the first five). @option{--pager} tells @ledgerprog@ to pass its output to the given pager program---very useful when the output is especially long. This behavior can be made the default by setting the @env{LEDGER_PAGER} environment variable. @option{--average} (@option{-A}) reports the average posting value. @option{--deviation} (@option{-D}) reports each posting's deviation from the average. It is only meaningful in the @command{register} and @command{prices} reports. @option{--percentage} (@option{-%}) shows account subtotals in the @command{balance} report as percentages of the parent account. @option{--totals} include running total information in the @command{xml} report. @option{--amount-data} (@option{-j}) changes the @command{register} report so that it outputs nothing but the date and the value column, and the latter without commodities. This is only meaningful if the report uses a single commodity. This data can then be fed to other programs, which could plot the date, analyze it, etc. @option{--total-data} (@option{-J}) changes the @command{register} report so that it outputs nothing but the date and totals column, without commodities. @option{--display EXPR} (@option{-d EXPR}) limits which postings or accounts or actually displayed in a report. They might still be calculated, and be part of the running total of a register report, for example, but they will not be displayed. This is useful for seeing last month's checking postings, against a running balance which includes all posting values: @example ledger -d "d>=[last month]" reg checking @end example The output from this command is very different from the following, whose running total includes only postings from the last month onward: @example ledger -p "last month" reg checking @end example Which is more useful depends on what you're looking to know: the total amount for the reporting range (@option{-p}), or simply a display restricted to the reporting range (using @option{-d}). @option{--date-format STR} (@option{-y STR}) changes the basic date format used by reports. The default uses a date like 2004/08/01, which represents the default date format of @samp{%Y/%m/%d}. To change the way dates are printed in general, the easiest way is to put @option{--date-format FORMAT} in the @ledgerprog@ initialization file @file{~/.ledgerrc} (or the file referred to by @env{LEDGER_INIT}). @option{--format STR} (@option{-F STR}) sets the reporting format for whatever report ledger is about to make. @xref{Format strings}. There are also specific format commands for each report type: @itemize @item @option{--balance-format STR} @item @option{--register-format STR} @item @option{--print-format STR} @item @option{--plot-amount-format STR} (-j @command{register}) @item @option{--plot-total-format STR} (-J @command{register}) @item @option{--equity-format STR} @item @option{--prices-format STR} @item @option{--wide-register-format STR} (-w @command{register}) @end itemize @subsection Commodity reporting These options affect how commodity values are displayed: @option{--price-db FILE} sets the file that is used for recording downloaded commodity prices. It is always read on startup, to determine historical prices. Other settings can be placed in this file manually, to prevent downloading quotes for a specific, for example. This is done by adding a line like the following: @example ; Don't download quotes for the dollar, or timelog values N $ N h @end example @option{--price-exp MINS} (@option{-L MINS}) sets the expected freshness of price quotes, in minutes. That is, if the last known quote for any commodity is older than this value---and if @option{--download} is being used---then the Internet will be consulted again for a newer price. Otherwise, the old price is still considered to be fresh enough. @option{--download} (@option{-Q}) causes quotes to be automagically downloaded, as needed, by running a script named @command{getquote} and expecting that script to return a value understood by ledger. A sample implementation of a @command{getquote} script, implemented in Perl, is provided in the distribution. Downloaded quote price are then appended to the price database, usually specified using the environment variable @env{LEDGER_PRICE_DB}. There are several different ways that ledger can report the totals it displays. The most flexible way to adjust them is by using value expressions, and the @option{-t} and @option{-T} options. However, there are also several ``default'' reports, which will satisfy most users basic reporting needs: @table @code @item -O, --quantity Reports commodity totals (this is the default) @item -B, --basis Reports the cost basis for all postings. @item -V, --market Reports the last known market value for all commodities. @item -G --gain Reports the net gain/loss for all commodities in the report that have a price history. @end table @subsection Environment variables Every option to ledger may be set using an environment variable. If an option has a long name such @option{--this-option}, setting the environment variable @env{LEDGER_THIS_OPTION} will have the same affect as specifying that option on the command-line. Options on the command-line always take precedence over environment variable settings, however. Note that you may also permanently specify option values by placing option settings in the file @file{~/.ledgerrc}, for example: @example --cache /tmp/.mycache --pager /bin/cat @end example @node Period expressions, Format strings, Options, Quick Reference @section Period expressions A period expression indicates a span of time, or a reporting interval, or both. The full syntax is: @example [INTERVAL] [BEGIN] [END] @end example The optional @var{INTERVAL} part may be any one of: @example every day every week every monthly every quarter every year every N days # N is any integer every N weeks every N months every N quarters every N years daily weekly biweekly monthly bimonthly quarterly yearly @end example After the interval, a begin time, end time, both or neither may be specified. As for the begin time, it can be either of: @example from since @end example The end time can be either of: @example to until @end example Where @var{SPEC} can be any of: @example 2004 2004/10 2004/10/1 10/1 october oct this week # or day, month, quarter, year next week last week @end example The beginning and ending can be given at the same time, if it spans a single period. In that case, just use @var{SPEC} by itself. In that case, the period @samp{oct}, for example, will cover all the days in october. The possible forms are: @example in @end example Here are a few examples of period expressions: @example monthly monthly in 2004 weekly from oct weekly from last month from sep to oct from 10/1 to 10/5 monthly until 2005 from apr until nov last oct weekly last august @end example @node Format strings, Value expressions, Period expressions, Quick Reference @section Format strings Format strings may be used to change the output format of reports. They are specified by passing a formatting string to the @option{--format} (@option{-F}) option. Within that string, constructs are allowed which make it possible to display the various parts of an account or posting in custom ways. Within a format strings, a substitution is specified using a percent character (@samp{%}). The basic format of all substitutions is: @example %[-][MIN WIDTH][.MAX WIDTH]EXPR @end example If the optional minus sign (@samp{-}) follows the percent character, whatever is substituted will be left justified. The default is right justified. If a minimum width is given next, the substituted text will be at least that wide, perhaps wider. If a period and a maximum width is given, the substituted text will never be wider than this, and will be truncated to fit. Here are some examples: @example %-P a transaction's payee, left justified %20P The same, right justified, at least 20 chars wide %.20P The same, no more than 20 chars wide %-.20P Left justified, maximum twenty chars wide @end example The expression following the format constraints can be a single letter, or an expression enclosed in parentheses or brackets. The allowable expressions are: @table @code @item % Inserts a percent sign. @item t Inserts the results of the value expression specified by @option{-t}. If @option{-t} was not specified, the current report style's value expression is used. @item T Inserts the results of the value expression specified by @option{-T}. If @option{-T} was not specified, the current report style's value expression is used. @item | Inserts a single space. This is useful if a width is specified, for inserting a certain number of spaces. @item _ Inserts a space for each level of an account's depth. That is, if an account has two parents, this construct will insert two spaces. If a minimum width is specified, that much space is inserted for each level of depth. Thus @samp{%5_}, for an account with four parents, will insert twenty spaces. @item (EXPR) Inserts the amount resulting from the value expression given in parentheses. To insert five times the total value of an account, for example, one could say @samp{%12(5*O)}. Note: It's important to put the five first in that expression, so that the commodity doesn't get stripped from the total. @item [DATEFMT] Inserts the result of formatting a posting's date with a date format string, exactly like those supported by @code{strftime}. For example: @samp{%[%Y/%m/%d %H:%M:%S]}. @item S Insert the pathname of the file from which the transaction's data was read. @item B Inserts the beginning character position of that transaction within the file. @item b Inserts the beginning line of that transaction within the file. @item E Inserts the ending character position of that transaction within the file. @item e Inserts the ending line of that transaction within the file. @item D By default, this is the same as @samp{%[%Y/%m%/d]}. The date format used can be changed at any time with the @option{-y} flag, however. Using @samp{%D} gives the user more control over the way dates are output. @item d This is the same as the @samp{%D} option, unless the transaction has an effective date, in which case it prints @samp{[ACTUAL_DATE=EFFECTIVE_DATE]}. @item X If a posting has been cleared, this inserts @samp{*} followed by a space; otherwise nothing is inserted. @item Y This is the same as @samp{%X}, except that it only displays a state character if all of the member postings have the same state. @item C Inserts the checking number for a transaction, in parentheses, followed by a space; if none was specified, nothing is inserted. @item P Inserts the payee related to a posting. @item a Inserts the optimal short name for an account. This is normally used in balance reports. It prints a parent account's name if that name has not been printed yet, otherwise it just prints the account's name. @item A Inserts the full name of an account. @item W This is the same as @samp{%A}, except that it first displays the posting's state @emph{if the transaction's posting states are not all the same}, followed by the full account name. This is offered as a printing optimization, so that combined with @samp{%Y}, only the minimum amount of state detail is printed. @item o Inserts the ``optimized'' form of a posting's amount. This is used by the print report. In some cases, this inserts nothing; in others, it inserts the posting amount and its cost. It's use is not recommend unless you are modifying the print report. @item n Inserts the note associated with a posting, preceded by two spaces and a semi-colon, if it exists. Thus, no none becomes an empty string, while the note @samp{foo} is substituted as @samp{ ; foo}. @item N Inserts the note associated with a posting, if one exists. @item / The @samp{%/} construct is special. It separates a format string between what is printed for the first posting of a transaction, and what is printed for all subsequent postings. If not used, the same format string is used for all postings. @end table @node Value expressions, File format, Format strings, Quick Reference @section Value expressions Value expressions are an expression language used by @ledgerprog@ to calculate values used by the program for many different purposes: @enumerate @item The values displayed in reports @item For predicates (where truth is anything non-zero), to determine which postings are calculated (@option{-l}) or displayed (@option{-d}). @item For sorting criteria, to yield the sort key. @item In the matching criteria used by automated postings. @end enumerate Value expressions support most simple math and logic operators, in addition to a set of one letter functions and variables. A function's argument is whatever follows it. The following is a display predicate that I use with the @command{balance} command: @example ledger -d /^Liabilities/?T<0:UT>100 balance @end example The effect is that account totals are displayed only if: 1) A Liabilities account has a total less than zero; or 2) the absolute value of the account's total exceeds 100 units of whatever commodity contains. If it contains multiple commodities, only one of them must exceed 100 units. Display predicates are also very handy with register reports, to constrain which transactions are printed. For example, the following command shows only transactions from the beginning of the current month, while still calculating the running balance based on all transactions: @example ledger -d "d>[this month]" register checking @end example This advantage to this command's complexity is that it prints the running total in terms of all transactions in the register. The following, simpler command is similar, but totals only the displayed postings: @example ledger -b "this month" register checking @end example @subsection Variables Below are the one letter variables available in any value expression. For the register and print commands, these variables relate to individual postings, and sometimes the account affected by a posting. For the balance command, these variables relate to accounts---often with a subtle difference in meaning. The use of each variable for both is specified. @table @code @item t This maps to whatever the user specified with @option{-t}. In a register report, @option{-t} changes the value column; in a balance report, it has no meaning by default. If @option{-t} was not specified, the current report style's value expression is used. @item T This maps to whatever the user specified with @option{-T}. In a register report, @option{-T} changes the totals column; in a balance report, this is the value given for each account. If @option{-T} was not specified, the current report style's value expression is used. @item m This is always the present moment/date. @end table @subsubsection Posting/account details @table @code @item d A posting's date, as the number of seconds past the epoch. This is always ``today'' for an account. @item a The posting's amount; the balance of an account, without considering children. @item b The cost of a posting; the cost of an account, without its children. @item v The market value of a posting, or an account without its children. @item g The net gain (market value minus cost basis), for a posting or an account without its children. It is the same as @samp{v-b}. @item l The depth (``level'') of an account. If an account has one parent, it's depth is one. @item n The index of a posting, or the count of postings affecting an account. @item X 1 if a posting's transaction has been cleared, 0 otherwise. @item R 1 if a posting is not virtual, 0 otherwise. @item Z 1 if a posting is not automated, 0 otherwise. @end table @subsubsection Calculated totals @table @code @item O The total of all postings seen so far, or the total of an account and all its children. @item N The total count of postings affecting an account and all its children. @item B The total cost of all postings seen so far; the total cost of an account and all its children. @item V The market value of all postings seen so far, or of an account and all its children. @item G The total net gain (market value minus cost basis), for a series of postings, or an account and its children. It is the same as @samp{V-B}. @end table @subsection Functions The available one letter functions are: @table @code @item - Negates the argument. @item U The absolute (unsigned) value of the argument. @item S Strips the commodity from the argument. @item A The arithmetic mean of the argument; @samp{Ax} is the same as @samp{x/n}. @item P The present market value of the argument. The syntax @samp{P(x,d)} is supported, which yields the market value at time @samp{d}. If no date is given, then the current moment is used. @end table @subsection Operators The binary and ternary operators, in order of precedence, are: @enumerate @item @samp{* /} @item @samp{+ -} @item @samp{! < > =} @item @samp{& | ?:} @end enumerate @subsection Complex expressions More complicated expressions are possible using: @table @code @item NUM A plain integer represents a commodity-less amount. @item @{AMOUNT@} An amount in braces can be any kind of amount supported by ledger, with or without a commodity. Use this for decimal values. @item /REGEXP/ @item W/REGEXP/ A regular expression that matches against an account's full name. If a posting, this will match against the account affected by the posting. @item //REGEXP/ @item p/REGEXP/ A regular expression that matches against a transaction's payee name. @item ///REGEXP/ @item w/REGEXP/ A regular expression that matches against an account's base name. If a posting, this will match against the account affected by the posting. @item c/REGEXP/ A regular expression that matches against the transaction code (the text that occurs between parentheses before the payee name). @item e/REGEXP/ A regular expression that matches against a posting's note, or comment field. @item (EXPR) A sub-expression is nested in parenthesis. This can be useful passing more complicated arguments to functions, or for overriding the natural precedence order of operators. @item [DATE] Useful specifying a date in plain terms. For example, you could say @samp{[2004/06/01]}. @end table