

I've already built an import from html (from my banking website), an export to. I find myself wanting a double-entry system with decent cashflow forecasting and nested accounts (for instance, I'd like to generate a report that aggregates all food sales, whereas I've separate accounts for different food items) the closest thing that's free/accessible for me is gnucash but it doesn't do cashflow and sales tax/VAT and invoicing is a bit of a pain. I've used Mathematica for my own accounts as well as for some simple business analysis and cash flow forecasting. But I found commercial accounting packages inflexible and awkward for small business use, as well as being too expensive. I've used Excel in the past in other business contexts but found it too unreliable, and it doesn't have the checks and balances that a proper accounting package has. Is anyone using Mathematica for basic accounting purposes? I am responsible for book-keeping and preparation of final accounts for 2 businesses. Comments on design issues welcome, and if anything is unclear please let me know. UPDATE 1: I've now put some preliminary sketches up in the Double folder on my github repository. Even if you don't use git, you can download everything in a zip file directly.


UPDATE 2: I would love to know if you download anything from the repository.

Finance, Statistics & Business Analysis.Wolfram Knowledgebase Curated computable knowledge powering Wolfram|Alpha. Wolfram Universal Deployment System Instant deployment across cloud, desktop, mobile, and more. This project analyzes large open source repositories, e.g., Linux Kernel and Mozilla Firefox.Wolfram Data Framework Semantic framework for real-world data. If time pressure increases productivity in the development or negative emotions during code review, this could be identified from the corresponding software repositories. As time-pressure is linked to human emotions and productivity, a key question for this research arises: Can one measure the impact of time pressure on a software project? In particular, every software project leaves its traces in the form of software repositories that store a project's full history of source code changes, bug reports, code review reports, mailing list communication, etc. As there always is pr essure to complete a project on given time, we can assume that time pressure is present in many software development projects. Academy of Finland (2016-2020) Although, we do not know the exact prevalence of time pressure in the software industry, we know that most projects (60-80%) encounter overruns.
