Introduction
GnuCash Android is a companion expense-tracker application for GnuCash (desktop) designed for Android. It allows you to record transactions on-the-go and later import the data into GnuCash for the desktop.
The application supports Android 2.3.4 Gingerbread (API level 10) and above.
Features include:
-
An easy-to-use interface.
-
Chart of Accounts: A master account can have a hierarchy of detail accounts underneath it.
This allows similar account types (e.g. Cash, Bank, Stock) to be grouped into one master account (e.g. Assets). -
Split Transactions: A single transaction can be split into several pieces to record taxes, fees, and other compound entries.
-
Double Entry: Every transaction must debit one account and credit another by an equal amount. This ensures that the "books balance": that the difference between income and outflow exactly equals the sum of all assets, be they bank, cash, stock or other.
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Income/Expense Account Types (Categories): These serve not only to categorize your cash flow, but when used properly with the double-entry feature, these can provide an accurate Profit&Loss statement.
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Scheduled Transactions: GnuCash has the ability to automatically create and enter transactions.
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Export to GnuCash XML, QIF or OFX. Also, scheduled exports to 3rd-party sync services like DropBox and Google Drive
-
Reports: View summary of transactions (income and expenses) as pie/bar/line charts
Installation
There are different ways to get the GnuCash app for Android; through the app store, or building it yourself.
App Store
Building
With Gradle
This project requires the Android SDK
to be installed in your development environment. In addition you'll need to set
the ANDROID_HOME
environment variable to the location of your SDK. For example:
export ANDROID_HOME=/home/<user>/tools/android-sdk
After satisfying those requirements, the build is pretty simple:
- Run
gradlew build installDevelopmentDebug
from the within the project folder. It will build the project for you and install it to the connected Android device or running emulator.
The app is configured to allow you to install a development and production version in parallel on your device.
With Android Studio
The easiest way to build is to install Android Studio v1.+ with Gradle v2.2.1. Once installed, then you can import the project into Android Studio:
- Open
File
- Import Project
- Select
build.gradle
under the project directory - Click
OK
Then, Gradle will do everything for you.
Contributing
There are several ways you could contribute to the development.
-
One way is providing translations for locales which are not yet available, or improving translations. See this blog post for some guidelines.
-
You could as well contribute code, fixing bugs, new features or automated tests. Pull requests are always welcome. Take a look at the bug tracker for ideas where to start.
For development, it is recommended to use the Android Studio for development which is available for free. Import the project into the IDE using the build.gradle file. The IDE will resolve dependencies automatically.
#Licence GnuCash Android is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Apache license, version 2.0. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.