beancount-mode
UsTaxes
beancount-mode | UsTaxes | |
---|---|---|
5 | 51 | |
102 | 1,383 | |
4.9% | 1.3% | |
4.8 | 8.7 | |
12 days ago | 9 days ago | |
Emacs Lisp | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
beancount-mode
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IRS will officially launch free online tax filing service for 2024 tax season
For me, the beauty of Beancount[0] is that it's just text files in Git. There's a web UI I use for generating reports, and a Python API with which I hacked together some import/export scripts, but 99% of my interactions with it are via Emacs[1] and Magit.
A ton of repetitive bookkeeping tasks become so much easier when you can copy and paste, or use keyboard macros or something like multiple-cursors[2], rather than have to click tens or hundreds of times in a GUI. Many years ago I used QuickBooks, and basic tasks like importing a bank statement took at least an order of magnitude longer than they do now.
Having my company's books in Git is also huge when it comes to auditing, concurrency, backups, and figuring out where things went wrong when accounts don't balance. As mentioned in another comment: `git diff` is a really powerful tool and it's awesome to be able to check out the books as they existed at a particular point in time. `git blame` is great for when things don't balance. Writing meaningful commit messages and comments keeps me sane when I try to remember a year later why something is recorded the way it is.
The biggest downside—or advantage, depending on how you look at it—is that there's no default or built-in chart of accounts, so you need a certain level of accounting acumen (or professional advice) to set things up at first. I'm pretty sure GnuCash aims to be more plug-and-play, whereas Beancount is more akin to a programming library that you use to build an accounting system that works for you. I agree with the grandparent commenter, who said that text-based accounting is "the best and most flexible accounting experience I've ever had." But the cost of that flexibility is that a certain level of base knowledge is a prerequisite.
[0]: https://beancount.io/
[1]: https://github.com/beancount/beancount-mode
[2]: https://github.com/magnars/multiple-cursors.el
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Use a plaint text accounting system to analyze org task management 's project
I use org mode for task management. I have just discovered accounting with Beancount (a awesome plain text accounting tool), with emacs support
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The Emacs Lock-In Effect or the Emacs Sunk Cost Fallacy
Interesting post. I'm ~6 mo into using emacs, but I'm a long time vim user. I use emacs for org mode and org-roam, and for personal finance[0]. And sometime, magit.And honestly... I may never use it for much more beyond this, and that's totally fine with me. Which I suppose is the point of flexibility -- people can use a flexible tool in the way that works best for them. My contribution here is to note that its _also_ ok to decide a tool, even an impressive tool, is something you only want in a few specific contexts without feeling bad about not adopting it everywhere.
I think its working out that way for me because I'm not actually much of a tinkerer. I very much like the straightforwardness of plain text, and I like all tools that empower me to put that in the center of my workflows. I can take or leave emacs, but I love org-*. Actually not too different from how I got into programming in the first place -- being able to write a plain text file in a certain format, point my browser to it, and boom it's a web page, was magic. And from there into actual programs -- use a certain format and boom it does stuff... The tools themselves - eh. Keep it simpler and I'm happier, but I'm not much for customizing them.
I can see how for the tinkering personality one can really get into emacs. That's not me, but emacs works for me for some things, and I've been happy to learn it for those.
[0]https://github.com/beancount/beancount-mode
- beancount-mode: Emacs major-mode to work with Beancount ledger files
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Literate Ledger Programming(?) with Org-mode
what do you mean by that? i know that beancount-mode talks about outline-minor-mode, which is a minor mode that allows to use heading just like Org-mode (and indeed Org-mode was built on top of outline-mode), but i make heavy use of noweb and tangling.
UsTaxes
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IRS will officially launch free online tax filing service for 2024 tax season
I’ve been using https://github.com/ustaxes/UsTaxes ; cross-checked with my manual form filing and it’s spot on. Print and mail and save the hassle :)
- The IRS is building its own online tax filing system. Tax-preppers not happy
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Call on the IRS to provide libre tax-filing software – Free Software Foundation
There is an AGPL program to fill the 1040 form. https://github.com/ustaxes/UsTaxes
- Open source tax filing website
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Ask HN: Anyone knows how to simplify taxes?
Yes.
We (PublicDomainCompany.com) are going to do it if someone doesn't beat us to it first. Will be a 2023 project for us (https://github.com/breck7/copypastetaxes).
I've been a supporter of https://github.com/ustaxes/UsTaxes and they are doing amazing grunt work that will be a big part of the solution.
Also, here's a great image of the first income tax return:
- IRS studying ways to provide FREE e-filing system
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Show HN: Calculator for US Individual Income tax, from 1970-present
Sort of tangentially, I'm working with other contributors on https://ustaxes.org, an open source tax filing webapp https://github.com/ustaxes/UsTaxes.
Currently, many Federal tax forms are supported, as well as tax filing for the state of Illinois. Filing for Oregon and California is under development!
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Ask HN: What are some fun, conversational GitHub repos to contribute to?
- https://github.com/ustaxes/UsTaxes
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Trying to hide the fact that many of us can file for free
Anyone can write tax filing software. There are free and open source solutions. Given how much good it would bring to "the people", more developers should work on this. https://github.com/ustaxes/UsTaxes
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Sen. Warren pushes TurboTax for answers about its efforts to block free tax filing
I'm working with other contributors on https://ustaxes.org, an open source tax filing webapp https://github.com/ustaxes/UsTaxes. The goal is to make tax filing free for everyone.
What are some alternatives?
orgzly-android - Outliner for taking notes and managing to-do lists
dflex - The sophisticated Drag and Drop library you've been waiting for 🥳
Emacs-VSCode-Default-High-Contras
opencv_py
vertico - :dizzy: vertico.el - VERTical Interactive COmpletion
logsuck - Easy log aggregation, indexing and searching
consult - :mag: consult.el - Consulting completing-read
thgtoa - The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Online Anonymity
laundry - Org mode for Racket
pcopy - pcopy is a temporary file host, nopaste and clipboard across machines. It can be used from the Web UI, via a CLI or without a client by using curl.
ledger - Double-entry accounting system with a command-line reporting interface
Arthur - How to build your own AI art installation from scratch [Moved to: https://github.com/maxvfischer/DIY-ai-art]