1.5 KiB
Start a journal
by hand
(power users)
The simplest possible journal is just an empty file:
echo >2017.journal
The name doesn't matter much and can be changed later.
One file per year is common,
and so is a .journal
or .hledger
extension.
Record a transaction, using journal format:
$ cat >>2017.journal
2017/1/26
expenses:food $10
assets:cash
<CTRL-D>
Account names can be anything
and you can change them later by search and replace.
If you don't know what to choose,
start with these five:
expenses
, income
, assets
, liabilities
, and equity
,
perhaps with one extra subcategory as above.
by text editor
Write transactions in a text editor and save the file.
by add
Use the add command:
hledger add -f 2017.journal
enter one or more transactions
set LEDGER_FILE
To avoid typing -f FILE
every time, set the
LEDGER_FILE
environment variable. Eg:
echo "export LEDGER_FILE=~/finance/2017.journal" >> ~/.bash_profile && source ~/.bash_profile
Most examples here assume you have done this.
by hledger-iadd
ensure $LEDGER_FILE exists
hledger iadd
enter one or more transactions
by hledger-web
ensure $LEDGER_FILE exists
hledger web
wait for web browser to open
click "add transaction" or press "a"
enter a transaction, click ok or press enter