About 4 years ago I started looking for a privacy-friendly way to keep track of my money across different accounts.<p>While searching, I found Plain Text Accounting [1], which means keeping financial records inside plain-text files. This method <i>really</i> appealed to the developer in me and I started digging deeper.<p>4 years later, I now have a stable workflow using Beancount [2] that lets me import all my financial activity into a plain-text file that lives inside a git repository on my disk. Needless to say, I'm super happy with this workflow!<p>So this ebook is my attempt at helping more folks get into the world of PTA and Beancount! In my experience, the documentation can be a bit tricky to get into, so I hope this ebook lowers the barrier to entry!<p>Open to answering questions!<p>[1]: <a href="https://plaintextaccounting.org/" rel="nofollow">https://plaintextaccounting.org/</a><p>[2]: <a href="https://beancount.github.io/" rel="nofollow">https://beancount.github.io/</a>
Will check it out. I'm about 4 years into hledger with manual entry since few of my banks and cards have csv instead of pdf only statements. Hope to see some good features in your book. Thank you for the effort that went into this and for documenting and sharing your work. Are there good quarterly reports that follow sensible standards? Do you have good examples of collapsing our super detailed sub-accounts into just the right level of detail for the reports? Re: expenses:gas:Exxon and expenses:gas:BP
Thanks. I've been wanting to get into Beancount for a while but my bank only sends me pdf bank statements which has been holding me back. Does your book address that?<p>Also, I went to your landing page and then clicked on "Click here to download your ebook" and straight away was taken to a credit card form with no indication of how much I would need to pay or that I would need to pay at all and the book wouldn't be free!
And here’s a sample chapter: <a href="https://personalfinancespython.com/files/sample.pdf" rel="nofollow">https://personalfinancespython.com/files/sample.pdf</a><p>(I couldn’t modify the original comment or add replies to it anymore, hence posting a new one.)