financier
actual
financier | actual | |
---|---|---|
16 | 60 | |
73 | 11,938 | |
- | 4.3% | |
0.0 | 9.8 | |
6 months ago | 6 days ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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.
financier
- Financier – 100% offline budgeting web app
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App for multiple budgets
I have used financier.io for years and love it—especially the fact that I can have multiple budgets (one budget for all of my personal accounts, and a separate budget for those accounts I share with my partner). But as our financial lives get more and more complicated, it becomes more and more of a hassle to manually enter every transaction, so I am considering a switch to a budget app that will connect with my bank accounts and pull my transactions.
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[Guide] How to install Financier App on your homelab (Ubuntu Server)
#!/bin/bash apt-get update -y apt install nodejs -y apt install npm -y npm install --global yarn -y npm install -g n -y npm install -g pm2 -y apt-get install unzip -y n stable wget https://github.com/financier-io/financier/archive/refs/heads/main.zip unzip main.zip cd financier-main/ yarn yarn build npx browserslist@latest --update-db -y yarn docs pm2 start ~/financier-main/api/index.js pm2 save pm2 startup pm2 list ip a
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random expenses always pile up
Also not the person you asked. I use Financier, which is much like YNAB, but with fewer bells and whistles and MUCH cheaper ($15/year vs. $99, both $USD). The biggest difference is that Financier won't link to your bank accounts, but I find that manual entry works better for us anyway.
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Moved Back to YNAB4
If you like YNAB4 but want a web version financier.io is a good alternative. it can even import your YNAB4 data. But after that, new transaction do need to be added manually, there's no importing (even by like csv files or whatever).
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Local-First Web Development
I've been really happy with CouchDB + PouchDB at https://financier.io
You can do unique things like offer a trial period without syncing (database wholly in browser), which allows for ridiculously quick onboarding.
And the sync mechanism works so well. It's really cool how easy it is to implement a Google Docs-like sync mechanism with conflict resolution baked in.
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For those of you still on YNAB classic this is for you
So you recreated https://financier.io/ ?
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Can people give specific, practical examples of how ynab helps?
If you've got the method down, check out financier.io where it's basically a free YNAB clone.
- GRIP app alternatief
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Any tips for a savings mindset?
The price has really gone up, but financier.io has the same thing but free...
actual
- Tell HN: YNAB will partly remove direct bank imports
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Firefly III: A free and open source personal finance manager
There is some experimental work being done with SimpleFIN integration[1] for US banks but I can't comment on how well that works.
Personally, I add each transaction manually. It allows me to stay on top my budget.
[1] https://github.com/actualbudget/actual/issues/2272
- Actual Budget App
- Ask HN: How do you manage your finances?
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[OC] The cost of being a bridesmaid
If you know how to self host, or have someone to teach you, you should check out Actual, https://actualbudget.org
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How to enable 2FA
Please upvote the feature request: https://github.com/actualbudget/actual/issues/2042
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Self-hosted Finance Manager
ActualBudget
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Mint: what are you using to budget (auto tracking spending categories and net-worth) now that Mint is ending
But several months ago I went back to check out Actual budget which was a sort of YNAB-clone whose author decided to release as open source. If you are comfortable with a bit of command line work, you can install it easily enough running as a hosted service in the free tier of a provider. I'm running in fly.io (docs for that are here). It was a bit fiddly trying to get set up for the first time, but the docs are detailed, and since I got it working it's been flawless and easy.
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Actual is going open-source
The repo is pretty active too, wonder if there’s a follow up blog post about the transition. https://github.com/actualbudget/actual
- GnuCash Tutorial and Concepts Guide
What are some alternatives?
myfin - Web frontend for the personal finances platform that'll help you budget, keep track of your income/spending and forecast your financial future.
Firefly III - Firefly III: a personal finances manager
localfirstweb.dev - A list of various resources for local-first web development
ghostfolio - Open Source Wealth Management Software. Angular + NestJS + Prisma + Nx + TypeScript 🤍
budgetzero - Open-source, self-hosted, zero-based budgeting.
plaintextaccounting - The plaintextaccounting.org website, a portal to Ledger, hledger, beancount and co. Also the PTA wiki.
Y64
actual-server - Actual's server
YNAB4-64bit - Conversion tool to get YNAB4 working on 64bit macOS (Catalina and later)
docker-budge
budge
data-importer - The Firefly III Data Importer can import data into Firefly III