Previously accounts were clipped in getPostings, however compound
balance reports re-use the output of getPostings for the different
subreports. This caused a problem when clipping erased the information
needed to determine the account type, as would be used by e.g.
incomestatement.
Add some extra tests for --count.
This adds a safer version of spanDefaultsFrom that won't create spans
that end before they start, and updates all reports to use it.
The only related change noticed so far is that close now gives an
error instead of a malformed entry, when there's no data to close.
[#2409]
This upgrades Account to enable it to store a multiperiod balance, with
a separate balance for each date period. This enables it do the hard
work in MultiBalanceReport.
Some new types are created to enable convenient operation of accounts.
- `BalanceData` is a type which stores an exclusive balance, inclusive
balance, and number of postings. This was previously directly stored
in Account, but is now factored into a separate data type.
- `PeriodData` is a container which stores date-indexed data, as well as
pre-period data. In post cases, this represents the report spans,
along with the historical data.
- Account becomes polymorphic, allowing customisation of the type of
data it stores. This will usually be `BalanceData`, but in
`BudgetReport` it can use `These BalanceData BalanceData` to store
both actuals and budgets in the same structure. The data structure
changes to contain a `PeriodData`, allowing multiperiod accounts.
Some minor changes are made to behaviour for consistency:
- --declared treats parent accounts consistently.
- --flat --empty ensures that implied accounts with no postings are not displayed, but
accounts with zero balance and actual postings are.
Previously depth-limiting was universal across all accounts, e.g. all
accounts are clipped to depth 2. However, sometimes you want certain
accounts clipped to a different depth than others, e.g. all expenses to
depth 3, while all assets to depth 2. This commit enables depth-limiting
to optionally include a regular expression, which limits the accounts it
applies to.
More than one depth limit can be passed, and they are applied to each
account name by the following rules:
- If one or more regular-expression depth limit applies, use the
most specific one
- If no regular-expression depth limits apply, and a flat depth limit is
supplied, use that
- Otherwise, do not do any depth limiting
For example, this will clip all accounts matching "assets" to depth 3,
all accounts matching "expenses" to depth 2, and all other accounts to
depth 1.
--depth assets=3 --depth expenses=2 --depth 1
Market prices are now shown using one line each,
the known prices are listed (forward / forward+reverse),
and the status of --infer-market-prices is shown.
Changes to enable more control of "rounding" behaviour
(ie, choosing display precisions for amounts).
This reverts 1.31's change of asprecision, making it a non-Maybe
again, and adds a new asrounding field providing more control over how
a target display precision is applied to existing amounts (two options
for now, more later). Functionality is in an interim state (reports do
no rounding).
This simplifies the code for styling amounts with or without precision.
But it complicates the semantics (Nothing is useful only when setting style).
Not sure if it's the best way.
This replaces the old journal*AccountQuery with the new Type query. This
enables uniform treatment of account type, and fixes a subtle bug
(#1921).
Note that cbcsubreportquery no longer takes Journal as an argument.
This requires checking parent accounts for any new accounts introduced by auto postings which do not exist in the original journal.
Also refactor journalFinalise to only call journalPostingsAddAccountTags once, and use fewer intermediate variables.
type:TYPES, where TYPES is any of the (case insensitive) letters
ALERXCV, matches accounts by their declared or inferred type.
(See https://hledger.org/hledger.html#account-types.)
This should work with most commands, eg:
hledger bal type:al
hledger reg type:x
API changes:
Journal has a new jaccounttypes map.
The journalAccountType lookup function makes it easy to check an account's type.
The journalTags and journalInheritedTags functions look up an account's tags.
Functions like journalFilterPostings and journalFilterTransactions,
and new matching functions matchesAccountExtra, matchesPostingExtra
and matchesTransactionExtra, use these to allow more powerful matching
that is aware of account types and tags.
Accounts, postings, and transactions can now all be filtered by the
tags in an account's declaration. In particular it's now possible to
more reliably select accounts by type, using their type: tag rather
than their name:
account myasset ; type:Asset
account myliability ; type:Liability
$ hledger accounts tag:type=^a
myasset
Accounts inherit tags from their parents.
API changes:
A finalised Journal has a new jdeclaredaccounttags field
for easy lookup of account tags.
Query.matchesTaggedAccount is a tag-aware version of matchesAccount.
Introduce --infer-equity option which will generate conversion postings.
--cost will override --infer-equity.
This means there will no longer be unbalanced transactions, but will be
offsetting conversion postings to balance things out. For example.
2000-01-01
a 1 AAA @@ 2 BBB
b -2 BBB
When converting to cost, this is treated the same as before.
When used with --infer-equity, this is now treated as:
2000-01-01
a 1 AAA
equity:conversion:AAA-BBB:AAA -1 AAA
equity:conversion:AAA-BBB:BBB 2 BBB
b -2 BBB
There is a new account type, Conversion/V, which is a subtype of Equity/E.
The first account declared with this type, if any, is used as the base account
for inferred equity postings in conversion transactions, overriding the default
"equity:conversion".
API changes:
Costing has been changed to ConversionOp with three options:
NoConversionOp, ToCost, and InferEquity.
The first correspond to the previous NoCost and Cost options, while the
third corresponds to the --infer-equity flag. This converts transactions with costs
(one or more transaction prices) to transactions with equity:conversion postings.
It is in ConversionOp because converting to cost with -B/--cost and inferring conversion
equity postings with --infer-equity are mutually exclusive.
Correspondingly, the cost_ record of ReportOpts has been changed to
conversionop_.
This also removes show_costs_ option in ReportOpts, as its functionality
has been replaced by the richer cost_ option.
Together with -E, this shows a balance for both used and declared
accounts (excluding empty parent accounts, which are usually not
wanted in list-mode reports).
This is somewhat consistent with --declared in the accounts and payees
commands, except for the leaf account restriction.
The idea of this is to be able to see a useful "complete" balance
report, even when you don't have transactions in all of your declared
accounts yet. I mainly want this for hledger-ui, but there's no harm
in exposing it in the balance CLI as well.
Together with -E, this allows showing a balance for all accounts, both
used and declared. I mainly want this for hledger-ui, but there's no
harm in exposing it in the balance command as well. This is somewhat
consistent with the accounts and payees commands.
This allows more control over how multicommodity amounts are displayed.
In addition to the default single-line display, and the recent commodity
column display, we now have multi-line display. This is controlled by
the --layout option, which has possible values "wide", "tall", and
"bare". The --commodity-column option has been hidden, but is equivalent
to --layout=bare.
squash
Combining valuation with filtration is subtle and error-prone (see e.g. #1625).
We have to do in in both MultiBalanceReport and PostingsReport, where it
is done in slightly different ways. This refactors this functionality
into separate functions which are called in both reports, for uniform
behaviour.