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author | Alexis Hildebrandt <afh@surryhill.net> | 2015-01-19 12:33:03 +0100 |
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committer | Alexis Hildebrandt <afh@surryhill.net> | 2015-01-20 17:18:29 +0100 |
commit | 197fb6d9b6d7fba0fbc3cd40fe1da809d5cd0f7b (patch) | |
tree | 6201ce98b67eb2ed6f7499a32f3a8338a161ac73 | |
parent | 9032f49befc8e2207c149e03af25f42e6e544a97 (diff) | |
download | ledger-197fb6d9b6d7fba0fbc3cd40fe1da809d5cd0f7b.tar.gz ledger-197fb6d9b6d7fba0fbc3cd40fe1da809d5cd0f7b.tar.bz2 ledger-197fb6d9b6d7fba0fbc3cd40fe1da809d5cd0f7b.zip |
[doc] Add more tests
-rw-r--r-- | doc/ledger3.texi | 18 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/doc/ledger3.texi b/doc/ledger3.texi index 7bf88b1c..2925d358 100644 --- a/doc/ledger3.texi +++ b/doc/ledger3.texi @@ -2213,7 +2213,7 @@ until an @samp{end apply account} directive was found. Define an alias for an account name. If you have a deeply nested tree of accounts, it may be convenient to define an alias, for example: -@smallexample @c input:validate +@smallexample @c input:94A99E8 alias Dining=Expenses:Entertainment:Dining alias Checking=Assets:Credit Union:Joint Checking Account @@ -2226,11 +2226,11 @@ The aliases are only in effect for transactions read in after the alias is defined and are affected by @code{account} directives that precede them. -@smallexample @c command:validate +@smallexample @c command:94A99E8 $ ledger bal --no-total ^Exp @end smallexample -@smallexample +@smallexample @c output:94A99E8 $10.00 Expenses:Entertainment:Dining @end smallexample @@ -2238,7 +2238,7 @@ With the option @option{--recursive-aliases}, aliases can refer to other aliases, the following example produces exactly the same transactions and account names as the preceding one: -@smallexample @c input:validate +@smallexample @c input:83E1FB3 alias Entertainment=Expenses:Entertainment alias Dining=Entertainment:Dining alias Checking=Assets:Credit Union:Joint Checking Account @@ -2248,11 +2248,11 @@ alias Checking=Assets:Credit Union:Joint Checking Account Checking @end smallexample -@smallexample @c command:validate +@smallexample @c command:83E1FB3 $ ledger balance --no-total --recursive-aliases ^Exp @end smallexample -@smallexample +@smallexample @c output:83E1FB3 $10.00 Expenses:Entertainment:Dining @end smallexample @@ -3418,10 +3418,10 @@ double braces price form is a shorthand only. Plus, it comes with dangers. This works fine: -@smallexample +@smallexample @c input:validate 2012-04-10 My Broker Assets:Brokerage 10 AAPL @@ $50.00 - Assets:Brokerage:Cash $750.00 + Assets:Brokerage:Cash $-500.00 2012-04-10 My Broker Assets:Brokerage:Cash $375.00 @@ -7586,7 +7586,7 @@ makes this easy to do, using the same periodic transactions as are used for budgeting. An example forecast report can be generated with: @smallexample @c command:validate -$ ledger --forecast "T>@{\$-500.00@}" register ^assets ^liabilities +$ ledger --file drewr3.dat --forecast "T>@{\$-500.00@}" register ^assets ^liabilities @end smallexample This report continues outputting postings until the running total |