doc: clean up HCAR archive
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## 2011/11/1 HCAR
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hledger is a library and end-user tool (with command-line, curses and web
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interfaces) for converting, recording, and analyzing financial
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transactions, using a simple human-editable plain text file format. It is
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a haskell port and friendly fork of John Wiegley's Ledger, licensed under
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GNU GPLv3+.
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hledger aims to be a reliable, practical tool for daily use. It reports
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charts of accounts or account balances, filters transactions by type,
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helps you record new transactions, converts CSV data from your bank,
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publishes your text journal with a rich web interface, generates simple
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charts, and provides an API for use in your own financial scripts and
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apps.
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In the last six months there have been two major releases. 0.15 focussed
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on features and 0.16 focussed on quality. Changes include:
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- new modal command-line interface, extensible with hledger-* executables in the path
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- more useful web interface, with real account registers and basic charts
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- hledger-web no longer needs to create support files, and uses latest yesod & warp
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- more ledger compatibility
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- misc command enhancements, API improvements, bug fixes, documentation updates
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- lines of code increased by 3k to 8k
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- project committers increased by 6 to 21
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Current plans include:
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- Continue the release rhythm of odd-numbered = features, even-numbered =
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quality/stability/polish, and releasing on the first of a month
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- In 0.17, clean up the storage layer, allow rcs integration via
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filestore, and read (or convert) more formats
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- Keep working towards wider usefulness, improving the web interface and
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providing standard financial reports
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## 2011/05 HCAR
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hledger is a haskell port and friendly fork of John Wiegley's ledger. It
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is a robust command-line accounting tool with a simple human-editable data
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format. Given a plain text file describing transactions, of money or any
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other commodity, hledger will print the chart of accounts, account
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balances, or transactions you're interested in. It can also help you
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record transactions, or convert CSV data from your bank. There are also
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curses and web interfaces. The project aims to provide a reliable,
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practical day-to-day financial reporting tool, and also a useful library
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for building financial apps in haskell.
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Since hledger's last HCAR entry in 2009, hledger became cabalised, had 10
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non-bugfix releases on hackage, split into multiple packages, acquired a
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public mailing list, bug tracker, fairly comprehensive manual,
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cross-platform binaries, and has grown to 5k lines of code and 15
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committers. 0.14 has just been released, with 5 code committers.
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The project is available under the GNU GPLv3 or later, at http://hledger.org .
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Current plans are to continue development at a steady pace, to attract
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more developers, and to become more useful to a wider range of users, eg
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by building in more awareness of standard accounting procedures and by
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improving the web and other interfaces.
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## 2009/05 HCAR
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hledger is a (primarily) command-line accounting tool similar to John
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Wiegley's "ledger". It reads a plain text journal file describing money
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or commodity transactions, or timelog entries, and generates precise
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activity and balance reports.
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Since the last report, hledger has reached release 0.4 on Hackage. It has
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60 test cases, new features such as basic curses and web-based interfaces,
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and has had some performance tuning. It is now quite useful for day to day
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reporting of money and time. Also, the project has a new web address
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(hledger.org), and has attracted two new committers.
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## 2008/11 HCAR
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hledger is a command-line accounting tool similar to John Wiegley’s ledger tool.
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The first release has been published on Hackage, and has attracted some
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interest. It can be used for generating simple balance and transaction
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reports from a plain-text general ledger. A home page and mail list has
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also been created.
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Immediate plans are to add some more of the most useful features from
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ledger, so that hledger can be used for day-to-day finances, and to grow
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the community of contributors.
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12
doc/HCAR/200811
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12
doc/HCAR/200811
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@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
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2008/11 HCAR
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hledger is a command-line accounting tool similar to John Wiegley’s ledger tool.
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The first release has been published on Hackage, and has attracted some
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interest. It can be used for generating simple balance and transaction
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reports from a plain-text general ledger. A home page and mail list has
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also been created.
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Immediate plans are to add some more of the most useful features from
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ledger, so that hledger can be used for day-to-day finances, and to grow
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the community of contributors.
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12
doc/HCAR/200905
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12
doc/HCAR/200905
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@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
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2009/05 HCAR
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hledger is a (primarily) command-line accounting tool similar to John
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Wiegley's "ledger". It reads a plain text journal file describing money
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or commodity transactions, or timelog entries, and generates precise
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activity and balance reports.
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Since the last report, hledger has reached release 0.4 on Hackage. It has
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60 test cases, new features such as basic curses and web-based interfaces,
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and has had some performance tuning. It is now quite useful for day to day
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reporting of money and time. Also, the project has a new web address
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(hledger.org), and has attracted two new committers.
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24
doc/HCAR/201105
Normal file
24
doc/HCAR/201105
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@ -0,0 +1,24 @@
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2011/05 HCAR
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hledger is a haskell port and friendly fork of John Wiegley's ledger. It
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|
is a robust command-line accounting tool with a simple human-editable data
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|
format. Given a plain text file describing transactions, of money or any
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other commodity, hledger will print the chart of accounts, account
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|
balances, or transactions you're interested in. It can also help you
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|
record transactions, or convert CSV data from your bank. There are also
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curses and web interfaces. The project aims to provide a reliable,
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practical day-to-day financial reporting tool, and also a useful library
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for building financial apps in haskell.
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Since hledger's last HCAR entry in 2009, hledger became cabalised, had 10
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non-bugfix releases on hackage, split into multiple packages, acquired a
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public mailing list, bug tracker, fairly comprehensive manual,
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cross-platform binaries, and has grown to 5k lines of code and 15
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committers. 0.14 has just been released, with 5 code committers.
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The project is available under the GNU GPLv3 or later, at http://hledger.org .
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Current plans are to continue development at a steady pace, to attract
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more developers, and to become more useful to a wider range of users, eg
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by building in more awareness of standard accounting procedures and by
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improving the web and other interfaces.
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