hledger/tests/journal/amounts-and-commodities.test
2020-03-17 17:48:17 -07:00

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# Amounts, commodity symbols, commodity directives, amount styles..
# 1. decimal point/digit grouping chars are autodetected,
# separately for each commodity, which can be surprising. TODO
# So hledger parses 1 XAU at 1000 USD here:
<
1/1
assets:gold 1,000 XAU @ 1,000.00 USD
equity
$ hledger -f - bal --flat --no-total -B
1,000.00 USD assets:gold
-1,000.00 USD equity
# while ledger parses 1000 XAU at 1000 USD each:
# $ ledger bal --flat --no-total -B
# USD1000000 assets:gold
# USD-1000000 equity)
# a commodity may contain/end with numbers, if double quoted
# 2. without quotes, fail. XXX parse error should be clearer here
<
2010-04-05 x
a 10 DE0002635307
b
$ hledger -f- print
>2 /unexpected/
>= 1
# 3. with quotes, ok; quotes appear in print output
<
2010-04-05 x
a 10 "DE 0002 635307"
b
$ hledger -f- print --explicit
2010-04-05 x
a 10 "DE 0002 635307"
b -10 "DE 0002 635307"
>=
# 4. and in other reports too, I guess
$ hledger -f- balance
10 "DE 0002 635307" a
-10 "DE 0002 635307" b
--------------------
0
# 5. autobalance with prices
<
2016/1/1
saving-card $-105
snacks 95 EUR @@ $100
Equity:Unbalanced
$ hledger -f- print -x
2016-01-01
saving-card $-105
snacks 95 EUR @@ $100
Equity:Unbalanced $5
>=
# 6. The four decimal places of the market price should not alter the
# canonical style of two decimal places in a's converted-to-B balance
# (#295), but it turns out they do with -V. This can be fixed with a
# commodity directive.
<
; use a commodity directive to ensure B is displayed with two decimal
; places, or the price directive plus -V would make it four
commodity 1.00 B
P 2015/1/1 A 1.0001 B
2015/1/1
(a) 1.00 A
(b) 1.00 B
$ hledger -f- bal -V -N
1.00 B a
1.00 B b
# 7. A multi-line commodity directive also works.
<
commodity B
format 1.00 B
P 2015/1/1 A 1.0001 B
2015/1/1
(a) 1.00 A
(b) 1.00 B
$ hledger -f- bal -V -N
1.00 B a
1.00 B b
# TODO
# 8. From the first amount it should detect that decimal point is period,
# from the second it should detect that there are comma-separated digit groups of size 3,
# giving commodity A a canonical style of 1,000.00 A.
#<
#2015/1/1
# (a) 1000.00 A
#
#2015/1/1
# (a) 1,000 A
#
#$ hledger -f- print
#2015-01-01
# (a) 1,000.00 A
#
#2015-01-01
# (a) 1,000.00 A
#
#>=
# TODO #749
# 8. Here the amount is parsed as 1. I think (hope) no country uses space
# for decimal point, so we should parse this as 1000.
<
2018-01-01
(a) USD1 000
$ hledger -f- reg amt:1
# 9. This commodity directive should complain about a missing decimal separator,
# which we now require.
<
commodity 1 000 USD
2018-01-01
(a) USD1 000
$ hledger -f- bal
>2 /decimal point or decimal comma/
>=1
# 10. After a space-grouped amount, a posting comment should parse.
<
2018-01-01
(a) USD 1 000 ;comment
$ hledger -f- print
> // # any stdout, no stderr, 0 exit code
# 11. After a space-grouped amount, trailing whitespace should parse.
<
2018-01-01
(a) USD 1 000
$ hledger -f- print
> // # any stdout, no stderr, 0 exit code
# 12. Example of surprising decimal mark parsing behaviour.
# Without a commodity declaration, these amounts are parsed as 10 and 10000.
# <
# 2000/1/1
# a $-10,000
# b $10,000.00
#
# $ hledger -f- print
# could not balance this transaction (real postings are off by $9,990,000)
# 2000-01-01
# a $-10,000
# b $10,000,000