hledger
- NAME
- SYNOPSIS
- DESCRIPTION
- PART 1: USER INTERFACE
- Input
- Commands
- Options
- Command line tips
- Output
- Environment
- PART 2: DATA FORMATS
- Journal
- CSV
- Timeclock
- Timedot
- PART 3: REPORTING CONCEPTS
- Time periods
- Depth
- Queries
- Pivoting
- Generating data
- Forecasting
- Budgeting
- Cost reporting
- Valuation
- PART 4: COMMANDS
- PART 5: COMMON TASKS
- BUGS
NAME
hledger - robust, friendly plain text accounting (CLI version)
SYNOPSIS
hledger
hledger COMMAND [OPTS] [ARGS]
hledger ADDONCMD -- [OPTS] [ARGS]
DESCRIPTION
[Quick reference links: Options, Commands, Queries, Regular expressions, Period expressions, Journal, Directives, CSV, Timeclock, Timedot, Common tasks]
hledger is a robust, user-friendly, cross-platform set of programs for tracking money, time, or any other commodity, using double-entry accounting and a simple, editable file format. hledger is inspired by and largely compatible with ledger(1), and largely interconvertible with beancount(1).
This manual is for hledger's command line interface, version 1.30. It
also describes the common options, file formats and concepts used by all
hledger programs. It might accidentally teach you some
bookkeeping/accounting as well! You don't need to know everything in
here to use hledger productively, but when you have a question about
functionality, this doc should answer it. It is detailed, so do skip
ahead or skim when needed. You can read it on hledger.org, or as an info
manual or man page on your system. You can also get it from hledger
itself with
hledger --man
, hledger --info
or hledger help [TOPIC]
.
The main function of the hledger CLI is to read plain text files
describing financial transactions, crunch the numbers, and print a
useful report on the terminal (or save it as HTML, CSV, JSON or SQL).
Many reports are available, as subcommands. hledger will also detect
other hledger-*
executables as extra subcommands.
hledger usually reads from (and appends to) a journal file specified by
the LEDGER_FILE
environment variable (defaulting to
$HOME/.hledger.journal
); or you can specify files with -f
options.
It can also read timeclock files, timedot files, or any CSV/SSV/TSV file
with a date field.
Here is a small journal file describing one transaction:
2015-10-16 bought food
expenses:food $10
assets:cash
Transactions are dated movements of money (etc.) between two or more
accounts: bank accounts, your wallet, revenue/expense categories,
people, etc. You can choose any account names you wish, using :
to
indicate subaccounts. There must be at least two spaces between account
name and amount. Positive amounts are inflow to that account (debit),
negatives are outflow from it (credit). (Some reports show revenue,
liability and equity account balances as negative numbers as a result;
this is normal.)
hledger's add command can help you add transactions, or you can install other data entry UIs like hledger-web or hledger-iadd. For more extensive/efficient changes, use a text editor: Emacs + ledger-mode, VIM + vim-ledger, or VS Code + hledger-vscode are some good choices (see https://hledger.org/editors.html).
To get started, run hledger add
and follow the prompts, or save some
entries like the above in $HOME/.hledger.journal
, then try commands
like:
hledger print -x
hledger aregister assets
hledger balance
hledger balancesheet
hledger incomestatement
.
Run hledger
to list the commands. See also the "Starting a journal
file" and "Setting opening balances" sections in PART 5: COMMON
TASKS.
PART 1: USER INTERFACE
Input
hledger reads one or more data files, each time you run it. You can
specify a file with -f
, like so
$ hledger -f FILE print
Files are most often in hledger's journal format, with the .journal
file extension (.hledger
or .j
also work); these files describe
transactions, like an accounting general journal.
When no file is specified, hledger looks for .hledger.journal
in your
home directory.
But most people prefer to keep financial files in a dedicated folder,
perhaps with version control. Also, starting a new journal file each
year is common (it's not required, but helps keep things fast and
organised). So we usually configure a different journal file, by setting
the LEDGER_FILE
environment variable, to something like
~/finance/2023.journal
. For more about how to do that on your system,
see Common tasks > Setting LEDGER_FILE.
Data formats
Usually the data file is in hledger's journal format, but it can be in any of the supported file formats, which currently are:
Reader: | Reads: | Used for file extensions: |
---|---|---|
journal | hledger journal files and some Ledger journals, for transactions | .journal .j .hledger .ledger |
timeclock | timeclock files, for precise time logging | .timeclock |
timedot | timedot files, for approximate time logging | .timedot |
csv | CSV/SSV/TSV/character-separated values, for data import | .csv .ssv .tsv .csv.rules .ssv.rules .tsv.rules |
These formats are described in more detail below.
hledger detects the format automatically based on the file extensions
shown above. If it can't recognise the file extension, it assumes
journal
format. So for non-journal files, it's important to use a
recognised file extension, so as to either read successfully or to show
relevant error messages.
You can also force a specific reader/format by prefixing the file path with the format and a colon. Eg, to read a .dat file as csv format:
$ hledger -f csv:/some/csv-file.dat stats
Standard input
The file name -
means standard input:
$ cat FILE | hledger -f- print
If reading non-journal data in this way, you'll need to add a file format prefix, like:
$ echo 'i 2009/13/1 08:00:00' | hledger print -f timeclock:-
Multiple files
You can specify multiple -f
options, to read multiple files as one big
journal. When doing this, note that certain features (described below)
will be affected:
- Balance assertions will not see the effect of transactions in previous files. (Usually this doesn't matter as each file will set the corresponding opening balances.)
- Some directives will not affect previous or subsequent files.
If needed, you can work around these by using a single parent file which
includes the others, or concatenating the files into
one, eg: cat a.journal b.journal | hledger -f- CMD
.
Strict mode
hledger checks input files for valid data. By default, the most important errors are detected, while still accepting easy journal files without a lot of declarations:
- Are the input files parseable, with valid syntax ?
- Are all transactions balanced ?
- Do all balance assertions pass ?
With the -s
/--strict
flag, additional checks are performed:
- Are all accounts posted to, declared with an
account
directive ? (Account error checking) - Are all commodities declared with a
commodity
directive ? (Commodity error checking) - Are all commodity conversions declared explicitly ?
You can use the check command to run individual checks -- the ones listed above and some more.
Commands
hledger provides various subcommands for getting things done. Most of these commands do not change the journal file; they just read it and output a report. A few commands assist with adding data and file management.
To show the commands list, run hledger
with no arguments. The commands
are described in detail in PART 4: COMMANDS, below.
To use a particular command, run hledger CMD [CMDOPTS] [CMDARGS]
,
-
CMD is the full command name, or its standard abbreviation shown in the commands list, or any unambiguous prefix of the name.
-
CMDOPTS are command-specific options, if any. Command-specific options must be written after the command name. Eg:
hledger print -x
. -
CMDARGS are additional arguments to the command, if any. Most hledger commands accept arguments representing a query, to limit the data in some way. Eg:
hledger reg assets:checking
.
To list a command's options, arguments, and documentation in the
terminal, run hledger CMD -h
. Eg: hledger bal -h
.
Add-on commands
In addition to the built-in commands, you can install add-on commands: programs or scripts named "hledger-SOMETHING", which will also appear in hledger's commands list. If you used the hledger-install script, you will have several add-ons installed already. Some more can be found in hledger's bin/ directory, documented at https://hledger.org/scripts.html.
More precisely, add-on commands are programs or scripts in your shell's PATH, whose name starts with "hledger-" and ends with no extension or a recognised extension (".bat", ".com", ".exe", ".hs", ".js", ".lhs", ".lua", ".php", ".pl", ".py", ".rb", ".rkt", or ".sh"), and (on unix and mac) which has executable permission for the current user.
You can run add-on commands using hledger, much like built-in commands:
hledger ADDONCMD [-- ADDONCMDOPTS] [ADDONCMDARGS]
. But note the double
hyphen argument, required before add-on-specific options. Eg:
hledger ui -- --watch
or hledger web -- --serve
. If this causes
difficulty, you can always run the add-on directly, without using
hledger
: hledger-ui --watch
or hledger-web --serve
.
Options
Run hledger -h
to see general command line help, and general options
which are common to most hledger commands. These options can be written
anywhere on the command line. They can be grouped into help, input, and
reporting options:
General help options
-h --help
: show general or COMMAND help
--man
: show general or COMMAND user manual with man
--info
: show general or COMMAND user manual with info
--version
: show general or ADDONCMD version
--debug[=N]
: show debug output (levels 1-9, default: 1)
General input options
-f FILE --file=FILE
: use a different input file. For stdin, use - (default:
$LEDGER_FILE
or $HOME/.hledger.journal
)
--rules-file=RULESFILE
: Conversion rules file to use when reading CSV (default: FILE.rules)
--separator=CHAR
: Field separator to expect when reading CSV (default: ',')
--alias=OLD=NEW
: rename accounts named OLD to NEW
--anon
: anonymize accounts and payees
--pivot FIELDNAME
: use some other field or tag for the account name
-I --ignore-assertions
: disable balance assertion checks (note: does not disable balance
assignments)
-s --strict
: do extra error checking (check that all posted accounts are
declared)
General reporting options
-b --begin=DATE
: include postings/txns on or after this date (will be adjusted to
preceding subperiod start when using a report interval)
-e --end=DATE
: include postings/txns before this date (will be adjusted to
following subperiod end when using a report interval)
-D --daily
: multiperiod/multicolumn report by day
-W --weekly
: multiperiod/multicolumn report by week
-M --monthly
: multiperiod/multicolumn report by month
-Q --quarterly
: multiperiod/multicolumn report by quarter
-Y --yearly
: multiperiod/multicolumn report by year
-p --period=PERIODEXP
: set start date, end date, and/or reporting interval all at once
using period expressions syntax
--date2
: match the secondary date instead (see command help for other
effects)
--today=DATE
: override today's date (affects relative smart dates, for
tests/examples)
-U --unmarked
: include only unmarked postings/txns (can combine with -P or -C)
-P --pending
: include only pending postings/txns
-C --cleared
: include only cleared postings/txns
-R --real
: include only non-virtual postings
-NUM --depth=NUM
: hide/aggregate accounts or postings more than NUM levels deep
-E --empty
: show items with zero amount, normally hidden (and vice-versa in
hledger-ui/hledger-web)
-B --cost
: convert amounts to their cost/selling amount at transaction time
-V --market
: convert amounts to their market value in default valuation
commodities
-X --exchange=COMM
: convert amounts to their market value in commodity COMM
--value
: convert amounts to cost or market value, more flexibly than -B/-V/-X
--infer-equity
: infer conversion equity postings from costs
--infer-costs
: infer costs from conversion equity postings
--infer-market-prices
: use costs as additional market prices, as if they were P directives
--forecast
: generate transactions from periodic
rules,
: between the latest recorded txn and 6 months from today,
: or during the specified PERIOD (= is required).
: Auto posting rules will be applied to these transactions as well.
: Also, in hledger-ui make future-dated transactions visible.
--auto
: generate extra postings by applying auto posting
rules to all txns (not just forecast
txns)
--verbose-tags
: add visible tags indicating transactions or postings which have been
generated/modified
--commodity-style
: Override the commodity style in the output for the specified
commodity. For example 'EUR1.000,00'.
--color=WHEN (or --colour=WHEN)
: Should color-supporting commands use ANSI color codes in text
output.
: 'auto' (default): whenever stdout seems to be a color-supporting
terminal.
: 'always' or 'yes': always, useful eg when piping output into
'less -R'.
: 'never' or 'no': never.
: A NO_COLOR environment variable overrides this.
--pretty[=WHEN]
: Show prettier output, e.g. using unicode box-drawing characters.
: Accepts 'yes' (the default) or 'no' ('y', 'n', 'always',
'never' also work).
: If you provide an argument you must use '=', e.g.
'--pretty=yes'.
When a reporting option appears more than once in the command line, the last one takes precedence.
Some reporting options can also be written as query arguments.
Command line tips
Here are some details useful to know about for hledger command lines (and elsewhere). Feel free to skip this section until you need it.
Special characters
Single escaping (shell metacharacters)
In shell command lines, characters significant to your shell - such as
spaces, <
, >
, (
, )
, |
, $
and \
- should be
"shell-escaped" if you want hledger to see them. This is done by
enclosing them in single or double quotes, or by writing a backslash
before them. Eg to match an account name containing a space:
$ hledger register 'credit card'
or:
$ hledger register credit\ card
Windows users should keep in mind that cmd
treats single quote as a
regular character, so you should be using double quotes exclusively.
PowerShell treats both single and double quotes as quotes.
Double escaping (regular expression metacharacters)
Characters significant in regular expressions
(described below) - such as .
, ^
, $
, [
, ]
, (
, )
, |
, and
\
- may need to be "regex-escaped" if you don't want them to be
interpreted by hledger's regular expression engine. This is done by
writing backslashes before them, but since backslash is typically also a
shell metacharacter, both shell-escaping and regex-escaping will be
needed. Eg to match a literal $
sign while using the bash shell:
$ hledger balance cur:'\$'
or:
$ hledger balance cur:\\$
Triple escaping (for add-on commands)
When you use hledger to run an external add-on command (described
below), one level of shell-escaping is lost from any options or
arguments intended for by the add-on command, so those need an extra
level of shell-escaping. Eg to match a literal $
sign while using the
bash shell and running an add-on command (ui
):
$ hledger ui cur:'\\$'
or:
$ hledger ui cur:\\\\$
If you wondered why four backslashes, perhaps this helps:
unescaped: | $ |
escaped: | \$ |
double-escaped: | \\$ |
triple-escaped: | \\\\$ |
Or, you can avoid the extra escaping by running the add-on executable directly:
$ hledger-ui cur:\\$
Less escaping
Options and arguments are sometimes used in places other than the shell command line, where shell-escaping is not needed, so there you should use one less level of escaping. Those places include:
- an @argumentfile
- hledger-ui's filter field
- hledger-web's search form
- GHCI's prompt (used by developers).
Unicode characters
hledger is expected to handle non-ascii characters correctly:
-
they should be parsed correctly in input files and on the command line, by all hledger tools (add, iadd, hledger-web's search/add/edit forms, etc.)
-
they should be displayed correctly by all hledger tools, and on-screen alignment should be preserved.
This requires a well-configured environment. Here are some tips:
-
A system locale must be configured, and it must be one that can decode the characters being used. In bash, you can set a locale like this:
export LANG=en_US.UTF-8
. There are some more details in Troubleshooting. This step is essential - without it, hledger will quit on encountering a non-ascii character (as with all GHC-compiled programs). -
your terminal software (eg Terminal.app, iTerm, CMD.exe, xterm..) must support unicode
-
the terminal must be using a font which includes the required unicode glyphs
-
the terminal should be configured to display wide characters as double width (for report alignment)
-
on Windows, for best results you should run hledger in the same kind of environment in which it was built. Eg hledger built in the standard CMD.EXE environment (like the binaries on our download page) might show display problems when run in a cygwin or msys terminal, and vice versa. (See eg #961).
Regular expressions
hledger uses regular expressions in a number of places:
- query terms, on the command line and in the hledger-web
search form:
REGEX
,desc:REGEX
,cur:REGEX
,tag:...=REGEX
- CSV rules conditional blocks:
if REGEX ...
- account alias directive and
--alias
option:alias /REGEX/ = REPLACEMENT
,--alias /REGEX/=REPLACEMENT
hledger's regular expressions come from the regex-tdfa library. If they're not doing what you expect, it's important to know exactly what they support:
- they are case insensitive
- they are infix matching (they do not need to match the entire thing being matched)
- they are POSIX ERE (extended regular expressions)
- they also support GNU word
boundaries
(
\b
,\B
,\<
,\>
) - they do not support
backreferences;
if you write
\1
, it will match the digit1
. Except when doing text replacement, eg in account aliases, where backreferences can be used in the replacement string to reference capturing groups in the search regexp. - they do not support mode
modifiers
(
(?s)
), character classes (\w
,\d
), or anything else not mentioned above.
Some things to note:
-
In the
alias
directive and--alias
option, regular expressions must be enclosed in forward slashes (/REGEX/
). Elsewhere in hledger, these are not required. -
In queries, to match a regular expression metacharacter like
$
as a literal character, prepend a backslash. Eg to search for amounts with the dollar sign in hledger-web, writecur:\$
. -
On the command line, some metacharacters like
$
have a special meaning to the shell and so must be escaped at least once more. See Special characters.
Argument files
You can save a set of command line options and arguments in a file, and
then reuse them by writing @FILENAME
as a command line argument. Eg:
hledger bal @foo.args
.
Inside the argument file, each line should contain just one option or
argument. Don't use spaces except inside quotes (or you'll see a
confusing error); write =
(or nothing) between a flag and its
argument. For the special characters mentioned above, use one less level
of quoting than you would at the command prompt.
Output
Output destination
hledger commands send their output to the terminal by default. You can of course redirect this, eg into a file, using standard shell syntax:
$ hledger print > foo.txt
Some commands (print, register, stats, the balance commands) also
provide the -o/--output-file
option, which does the same thing without
needing the shell. Eg:
$ hledger print -o foo.txt
$ hledger print -o - # write to stdout (the default)
Output format
Some commands offer other kinds of output, not just text on the terminal. Here are those commands and the formats currently supported:
- | txt | csv | html | json | sql |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
aregister | Y | Y | Y | Y | |
balance | Y 1 | Y 1 | Y 1,2 | Y | |
balancesheet | Y 1 | Y 1 | Y 1 | Y | |
balancesheetequity | Y 1 | Y 1 | Y 1 | Y | |
cashflow | Y 1 | Y 1 | Y 1 | Y | |
incomestatement | Y 1 | Y 1 | Y 1 | Y | |
Y | Y | Y | Y | ||
register | Y | Y | Y |
- 1 Also affected by the balance commands'
--layout
option. - 2
balance
does not support html output without a report interval or with--budget
.
The output format is selected by the -O/--output-format=FMT
option:
$ hledger print -O csv # print CSV on stdout
or by the filename extension of an output file specified with the
-o/--output-file=FILE.FMT
option:
$ hledger balancesheet -o foo.csv # write CSV to foo.csv
The -O
option can be combined with -o
to override the file
extension, if needed:
$ hledger balancesheet -o foo.txt -O csv # write CSV to foo.txt
Some notes about the various output formats:
CSV output
- In CSV output, digit group marks (such as thousands separators) are disabled automatically.
HTML output
- HTML output can be styled by an optional
hledger.css
file in the same directory.
JSON output
-
This is not yet much used; real-world feedback is welcome.
-
Our JSON is rather large and verbose, since it is a faithful representation of hledger's internal data types. To understand the JSON, read the Haskell type definitions, which are mostly in https://github.com/simonmichael/hledger/blob/master/hledger-lib/Hledger/Data/Types.hs.
- hledger represents quantities as Decimal values storing up to 255 significant digits, eg for repeating decimals. Such numbers can arise in practice (from automatically-calculated transaction prices), and would break most JSON consumers. So in JSON, we show quantities as simple Numbers with at most 10 decimal places. We don't limit the number of integer digits, but that part is under your control. We hope this approach will not cause problems in practice; if you find otherwise, please let us know. (Cf #1195)
SQL output
-
This is not yet much used; real-world feedback is welcome.
-
SQL output is expected to work at least with SQLite, MySQL and Postgres.
-
For SQLite, it will be more useful if you modify the generated
id
field to be a PRIMARY KEY. Eg:$ hledger print -O sql | sed 's/id serial/id INTEGER PRIMARY KEY AUTOINCREMENT NOT NULL/g' | ...
-
SQL output is structured with the expectations that statements will be executed in the empty database. If you already have tables created via SQL output of hledger, you would probably want to either clear tables of existing data (via
delete
ortruncate
SQL statements) or drop tables completely as otherwise your postings will be duped.
Commodity styles
When displaying amounts, hledger infers a standard display style for each commodity/currency, as described below in Commodity display style.
If needed, this can be overridden by a -c/--commodity-style
option
(except for cost amounts and amounts displayed by the
print
command, which are always displayed with all decimal
digits). For example, the following will force dollar amounts to be
displayed as shown:
$ hledger print -c '$1.000,0'
This option can repeated to set the display style for multiple commodities/currencies. Its argument is as described in the commodity directive.
Colour
In terminal output, some commands can produce colour when the terminal supports it:
- if the
--color/--colour
option is given a value ofyes
oralways
(orno
ornever
), colour will (or will not) be used; - otherwise, if the
NO_COLOR
environment variable is set, colour will not be used; - otherwise, colour will be used if the output (terminal or file) supports it.
Box-drawing
In terminal output, you can enable unicode box-drawing characters to render prettier tables:
- if the
--pretty
option is given a value ofyes
oralways
(orno
ornever
), unicode characters will (or will not) be used; - otherwise, unicode characters will not be used.
Paging
When showing long output in the terminal, hledger will try to use the
pager specified by the PAGER
environment variable, or less
, or
more
. (A pager is a helper program that shows one page at a time
rather than scrolling everything off screen). Currently it does this
only for help output, not for reports; specifically,
- when listing commands, with
hledger
- when showing help with
hledger [CMD] --help
, - when viewing manuals with
hledger help
orhledger --man
.
Note the pager is expected to handle ANSI codes, which hledger uses eg
for bold emphasis. For the common pager less
(and its more
compatibility mode), we add R
to the LESS
and MORE
environment
variables to make this work. If you use a different pager, you might
need to configure it similarly, to avoid seeing junk on screen (let us
know). Otherwise, you can set the NO_COLOR
environment variable to 1
to disable all ANSI output (see Colour).
Debug output
We intend hledger to be relatively easy to troubleshoot, introspect and
develop. You can add --debug[=N]
to any hledger command line to see
additional debug output. N ranges from 1 (least output, the default) to
9 (maximum output). Typically you would start with 1 and increase until
you are seeing enough. Debug output goes to stderr, and is not affected
by -o/--output-file
(unless you redirect stderr to stdout, eg:
2>&1
). It will be interleaved with normal output, which can help
reveal when parts of the code are evaluated. To capture debug output in
a log file instead, you can usually redirect stderr, eg:
hledger bal --debug=3 2>hledger.log
Environment
These environment variables affect hledger:
COLUMNS This is normally set by your terminal; some hledger commands
(register
) will format their output to this width. If not set, they
will try to use the available terminal width.
LEDGER_FILE The main journal file to use when not specified with
-f/--file
. Default: $HOME/.hledger.journal
.
NO_COLOR If this environment variable is set (with any value),
hledger will not use ANSI color codes in terminal output, unless
overridden by an explicit --color/--colour
option.
PART 2: DATA FORMATS
Journal
hledger's default file format, representing a General Journal. Here's a cheatsheet/mini-tutorial, or you can skip ahead to About journal format.
Journal cheatsheet
# Here is the main syntax of hledger's journal format
# (omitting extra Ledger compatibility syntax).
# hledger journals contain comments, directives, and transactions, in any order:
###############################################################################
# 1. Comment lines are for notes or temporarily disabling things.
# They begin with #, ;, or a line containing the word "comment".
# hash comment line
; semicolon comment line
comment
These lines
are commented.
end comment
# Some but not all hledger entries can have same-line comments attached to them,
# from ; (semicolon) to end of line.
###############################################################################
# 2. Directives modify parsing or reports in some way.
# They begin with a word or letter (or symbol).
account actifs ; type:A, declare an account that is an Asset. 2+ spaces before ;.
account passifs ; type:L, declare an account that is a Liability, and so on.. (ALERX)
alias chkg = assets:checking
commodity $0.00
decimal-mark .
include /dev/null
payee Whole Foods
P 2022-01-01 AAAA $1.40
~ monthly budget goals ; <- 2+ spaces between period expression and description
expenses:food $400
expenses:home $1000
budgeted
###############################################################################
# 3. Transactions are what it's all about; they are dated events,
# usually describing movements of money.
# They begin with a date.
# DATE DESCRIPTION ; This is a transaction comment.
# ACCOUNT NAME 1 AMOUNT1 ; <- posting 1. This is a posting comment.
# ACCOUNT NAME 2 AMOUNT2 ; <- posting 2. Postings must be indented.
# ; ^^ At least 2 spaces between account and amount.
# ... ; Any number of postings is allowed. The amounts must balance (sum to 0).
2022-01-01 opening balances are declared this way
assets:checking $1000 ; Account names can be anything. lower case is easy to type.
assets:savings $1000 ; assets, liabilities, equity, revenues, expenses are common.
assets:cash:wallet $100 ; : indicates subaccounts.
liabilities:credit card $-200 ; liabilities, equity, revenues balances are usually negative.
equity ; One amount can be left blank; $-1900 is inferred here.
2022-04-15 * (#12345) pay taxes
; There can be a ! or * after the date meaning "pending" or "cleared".
; There can be a transaction code (text in parentheses) after the date/status.
; Amounts' sign represents direction of flow, or credit/debit:
assets:checking $-500 ; minus means removed from this account (credit)
expenses:tax:us:2021 $500 ; plus means added to this account (debit)
; revenue/expense categories are also "accounts"
2022-01-01 ; The description is optional.
; Any currency/commodity symbols are allowed, on either side.
assets:cash:wallet GBP -10
expenses:clothing GBP 10
assets:gringotts -10 gold
assets:pouch 10 gold
revenues:gifts -2 "Liquorice Wands" ; Complex symbols
assets:bag 2 "Liquorice Wands" ; must be double-quoted.
2022-01-01 Cost in another commodity can be noted with @ or @@
assets:investments 2.0 AAAA @ $1.50 ; @ means per-unit cost
assets:investments 3.0 AAAA @@ $4 ; @@ means total cost
assets:checking $-7.00
2022-01-02 assert balances
; Balances can be asserted for extra error checking, in any transaction.
assets:investments 0 AAAA = 5.0 AAAA
assets:pouch 0 gold = 10 gold
assets:savings $0 = $1000
1999-12-31 Ordering transactions by date is recommended but not required.
; Postings are not required.
2022.01.01 These date
2022/1/1 formats are
12/31 also allowed (but consistent YYYY-MM-DD is recommended).
About journal format
hledger's usual data source is a plain text file containing journal
entries in hledger journal format. This file represents a standard
accounting general
journal. I use file names
ending in .journal
, but that's not required. The journal file
contains a number of transaction entries, each describing a transfer of
money (or any commodity) between two or more named accounts, in a simple
format readable by both hledger and humans.
hledger's journal format is compatible with most of Ledger's journal format, but not all of it. The differences and interoperation tips are described at hledger and Ledger. With some care, and by avoiding incompatible features, you can keep your hledger journal readable by Ledger and vice versa. This can useful eg for comparing the behaviour of one app against the other.
You can use hledger without learning any more about this file; just use the add or web or import commands to create and update it.
Many users, though, edit the journal file with a text editor, and track changes with a version control system such as git. Editor addons such as ledger-mode or hledger-mode for Emacs, vim-ledger for Vim, and hledger-vscode for Visual Studio Code, make this easier, adding colour, formatting, tab completion, and useful commands. See Editor configuration at hledger.org for the full list.
Here's a description of each part of the file format (and hledger's data model).
A hledger journal file can contain three kinds of thing: file comments, transactions, and/or directives (counting periodic transaction rules and auto posting rules as directives).
Comments
Lines in the journal will be ignored if they begin with a hash (#
) or
a semicolon (;
). (See also Other syntax.) hledger
will also ignore regions beginning with a comment
line and ending with
an end comment
line (or file end). Here's a suggestion for choosing
between them:
#
for top-level notes;
for commenting out things temporarilycomment
for quickly commenting large regions (remember it's there, or you might get confused)
Eg:
# a comment line
; another commentline
comment
A multi-line comment block,
continuing until "end comment" directive
or the end of the current file.
end comment
Some hledger entries can have same-line comments attached to them, from ; (semicolon) to end of line. See Transaction comments, Posting comments, and Account comments below.
Transactions
Transactions are the main unit of information in a journal file. They represent events, typically a movement of some quantity of commodities between two or more named accounts.
Each transaction is recorded as a journal entry, beginning with a simple date in column 0. This can be followed by any of the following optional fields, separated by spaces:
- a status character (empty,
!
, or*
) - a code (any short number or text, enclosed in parentheses)
- a description (any remaining text until end of line or a semicolon)
- a comment (any remaining text following a semicolon until end of line, and any following indented lines beginning with a semicolon)
- 0 or more indented posting lines, describing what was transferred and the accounts involved (indented comment lines are also allowed, but not blank lines or non-indented lines).
Here's a simple journal file containing one transaction:
2008/01/01 income
assets:bank:checking $1
income:salary $-1
Dates
Simple dates
Dates in the journal file use simple dates format: YYYY-MM-DD
or
YYYY/MM/DD
or YYYY.MM.DD
, with leading zeros optional. The year may
be omitted, in which case it will be inferred from the context: the
current transaction, the default year set with a Y
directive, or the current date when the command is run.
Some examples: 2010-01-31
, 2010/01/31
, 2010.1.31
, 1/31
.
(The UI also accepts simple dates, as well as the more flexible smart dates documented in the hledger manual.)
Posting dates
You can give individual postings a different date from their parent
transaction, by adding a posting comment containing
a tag (see below) like date:DATE
. This is probably the best
way to control posting dates precisely. Eg in this example the expense
should appear in May reports, and the deduction from checking should be
reported on 6/1 for easy bank reconciliation:
2015/5/30
expenses:food $10 ; food purchased on saturday 5/30
assets:checking ; bank cleared it on monday, date:6/1
$ hledger -f t.j register food
2015-05-30 expenses:food $10 $10
$ hledger -f t.j register checking
2015-06-01 assets:checking $-10 $-10
DATE should be a simple date; if the year is not
specified it will use the year of the transaction's date.
The date:
tag must have a valid simple date value if it is present, eg
a date:
tag with no value is not allowed.
Status
Transactions, or individual postings within a transaction, can have a status mark, which is a single character before the transaction description or posting account name, separated from it by a space, indicating one of three statuses:
mark  | status |
---|---|
 | unmarked |
! | pending |
* | cleared |
When reporting, you can filter by status with the -U/--unmarked
,
-P/--pending
, and -C/--cleared
flags; or the status:
, status:!
,
and status:*
queries; or the U, P, C keys in hledger-ui.
Note, in Ledger and in older versions of hledger, the "unmarked" state is called "uncleared". As of hledger 1.3 we have renamed it to unmarked for clarity.
To replicate Ledger and old hledger's behaviour of also matching pending, combine -U and -P.
Status marks are optional, but can be helpful eg for reconciling with real-world accounts. Some editor modes provide highlighting and shortcuts for working with status. Eg in Emacs ledger-mode, you can toggle transaction status with C-c C-e, or posting status with C-c C-c.
What "uncleared", "pending", and "cleared" actually mean is up to you. Here's one suggestion:
status | meaning |
---|---|
uncleared | recorded but not yet reconciled; needs review |
pending | tentatively reconciled (if needed, eg during a big reconciliation) |
cleared | complete, reconciled as far as possible, and considered correct |
With this scheme, you would use -PC
to see the current balance at your
bank, -U
to see things which will probably hit your bank soon (like
uncashed checks), and no flags to see the most up-to-date state of your
finances.
Code
After the status mark, but before the description, you can optionally write a transaction "code", enclosed in parentheses. This is a good place to record a check number, or some other important transaction id or reference number.
Description
A transaction's description is the rest of the line following the date and status mark (or until a comment begins). Sometimes called the "narration" in traditional bookkeeping, it can be used for whatever you wish, or left blank. Transaction descriptions can be queried, unlike comments.
Payee and note
You can optionally include a |
(pipe) character in descriptions to
subdivide the description into separate fields for payee/payer name on
the left (up to the first |
) and an additional note field on the right
(after the first |
). This may be worthwhile if you need to do more
precise querying and pivoting by payee or by
note.
Transaction comments
Text following ;
, after a transaction description, and/or on indented
lines immediately below it, form comments for that transaction. They are
reproduced by print
but otherwise ignored, except they may contain
tags, which are not ignored.
2012-01-01 something ; a transaction comment
; a second line of transaction comment
expenses 1
assets
Postings
A posting is an addition of some amount to, or removal of some amount from, an account. Each posting line begins with at least one space or tab (2 or 4 spaces is common), followed by:
- (optional) a status character (empty,
!
, or*
), followed by a space - (required) an account name (any text, optionally containing single spaces, until end of line or a double space)
- (optional) two or more spaces or tabs followed by an amount.
Positive amounts are being added to the account, negative amounts are being removed.
The amounts within a transaction must always sum up to zero. As a convenience, one amount may be left blank; it will be inferred so as to balance the transaction.
Be sure to note the unusual two-space delimiter between account name and amount. This makes it easy to write account names containing spaces. But if you accidentally leave only one space (or tab) before the amount, the amount will be considered part of the account name.
Account names
Accounts are the main way of categorising things in hledger. As in Double Entry Bookkeeping, they can represent real world accounts (such as a bank account), or more abstract categories such as "money borrowed from Frank" or "money spent on electricity".
You can use any account names you like, but we usually start with the
traditional accounting categories, which in english are assets
,
liabilities
, equity
, revenues
, expenses
. (You might see these
referred to as A, L, E, R, X for short.)
For more precise reporting, we usually divide the top level accounts
into more detailed subaccounts, by writing a full colon between account
name parts. For example, from the account names assets:bank:checking
and expenses:food
, hledger will infer this hierarchy of five accounts:
assets
assets:bank
assets:bank:checking
expenses
expenses:food
Shown as an outline, the hierarchical tree structure is more clear:
assets
bank
checking
expenses
food
hledger reports can summarise the account tree to any depth, so you can go as deep as you like with subcategories, but keeping your account names relatively simple may be best when starting out.
Account names may be capitalised or not; they may contain letters, numbers, symbols, or single spaces. Note, when an account name and an amount are written on the same line, they must be separated by two or more spaces (or tabs).
Parentheses or brackets enclosing the full account name indicate virtual postings, described below. Parentheses or brackets internal to the account name have no special meaning.
Account names can be altered temporarily or permanently by account aliases.
Amounts
After the account name, there is usually an amount. (Important: between account name and amount, there must be two or more spaces.)
hledger's amount format is flexible, supporting several international formats. Here are some examples. Amounts have a number (the "quantity"):
1
..and usually a currency symbol or commodity name (more on this below), to the left or right of the quantity, with or without a separating space:
$1
4000 AAPL
3 "green apples"
Amounts can be preceded by a minus sign (or a plus sign, though plus is the default), The sign can be written before or after a left-side commodity symbol:
-$1
$-1
One or more spaces between the sign and the number are acceptable when parsing (but they won't be displayed in output):
+ $1
$- 1
Scientific E notation is allowed:
1E-6
EUR 1E3
Decimal marks, digit group marks
A decimal mark can be written as a period or a comma:
1.23
1,23456780000009
In the integer part of the quantity (left of the decimal mark), groups of digits can optionally be separated by a digit group mark - a space, comma, or period (different from the decimal mark):
$1,000,000.00
EUR 2.000.000,00
INR 9,99,99,999.00
1 000 000.9455
Note, a number containing a single digit group mark and no decimal mark is ambiguous. Are these digit group marks or decimal marks ?
1,000
1.000
If you don't tell it otherwise, hledger will assume both of the above are decimal marks, parsing both numbers as 1.
To prevent confusing parsing mistakes and undetected typos, especially
if your data contains digit group marks (eg, thousands separators), we
recommend explicitly declaring the decimal mark character in each
journal file, using a directive at the top of the file. The
decimal-mark
directive is best, otherwise
commodity
directives will also work. These are
described below.
Commodity
Amounts in hledger have both a "quantity", which is a signed decimal number, and a "commodity", which is a currency symbol, stock ticker, or any word or phrase describing something you are tracking.
If the commodity name contains non-letters (spaces, numbers, or
punctuation), you must always write it inside double quotes
("green apples"
, "ABC123"
).
If you write just a bare number, that too will have a commodity, with
name ""
; we call that the "no-symbol commodity".
Actually, hledger combines these single-commodity amounts into more
powerful multi-commodity amounts, which are what it works with most of
the time. A multi-commodity amount could be, eg:
1 USD, 2 EUR, 3.456 TSLA
. In practice, you will only see
multi-commodity amounts in hledger's output; you can't write them
directly in the journal file.
(If you are writing scripts or working with hledger's internals, these
are the Amount
and MixedAmount
types.)
Directives influencing number parsing and display
You can add decimal-mark
and commodity
directives to the journal, to
declare and control these things more explicitly and precisely. These
are described below, but here's a quick example:
# the decimal mark character used by all amounts in this file (all commodities)
decimal-mark .
# display styles for the $, EUR, INR and no-symbol commodities:
commodity $1,000.00
commodity EUR 1.000,00
commodity INR 9,99,99,999.00
commodity 1 000 000.9455
Commodity display style
For the amounts in each commodity, hledger chooses a consistent display
style to use in most reports. (Exceptions: price amounts, and
all amounts displayed by the print
command, are displayed
with all of their decimal digits visible.)
A commodity's display style is inferred as follows.
First, if a default commodity is declared with
D
, this commodity and its style is applied to any no-symbol amounts in
the journal.
Then each commodity's style is inferred from one of the following, in order of preference:
- The commodity directive for that commodity (including the no-symbol commodity), if any.
- The amounts in that commodity seen in the journal's transactions. (Posting amounts only; prices and periodic or auto rules are ignored, currently.)
- The built-in fallback style, which looks like this:
$1000.00
. (Symbol on the left, period decimal mark, two decimal places.)
A style is inferred from journal amounts as follows:
- Use the general style (decimal mark, symbol placement) of the first amount
- Use the first-seen digit group style (digit group mark, digit group sizes), if any
- Use the maximum number of decimal places of all.
Cost amounts don't affect the commodity display style directly, but occasionally they can do so indirectly (eg when a posting's amount is inferred using a cost). If you find this causing problems, use a commodity directive to fix the display style.
To summarise: each commodity's amounts will be normalised to (a) the
style declared by a commodity
directive, or (b) the style of the first
posting amount in the journal, with the first-seen digit group style and
the maximum-seen number of decimal places. So if your reports are
showing amounts in a way you don't like, eg with too many decimal
places, use a commodity directive. Some examples:
# declare euro, dollar, bitcoin and no-symbol commodities and set their
# input number formats and output display styles:
commodity EUR 1.000,
commodity $1000.00
commodity 1000.00000000 BTC
commodity 1 000.
The inferred commodity style can be overridden by supplying a command line option.
Rounding
Amounts are stored internally as decimal numbers with up to 255 decimal places, and displayed with the number of decimal places specified by the commodity display style. Note, hledger uses banker's rounding: it rounds to the nearest even number, eg 0.5 displayed with zero decimal places is "0").
Costs
After a posting amount, you can note its cost (when buying) or selling
price (when selling) in another commodity, by writing either
@ UNITPRICE
or @@ TOTALPRICE
after it. This indicates a conversion
transaction, where one commodity is exchanged for another.
(You might also see this called "transaction price" in hledger docs, discussions, or code; that term was directionally neutral and reminded that it is a price specific to a transaction, but we now just call it "cost", with the understanding that the transaction could be a purchase or a sale.)
Costs are usually written explicitly with @
or @@
, but can also be
inferred automatically for simple multi-commodity transactions. Note, if
costs are inferred, the order of postings is significant; the first
posting will have a cost attached, in the commodity of the second.
As an example, here are several ways to record purchases of a foreign currency in hledger, using the cost notation either explicitly or implicitly:
-
Write the price per unit, as
@ UNITPRICE
after the amount:2009/1/1 assets:euros €100 @ $1.35 ; one hundred euros purchased at $1.35 each assets:dollars ; balancing amount is -$135.00
-
Write the total price, as
@@ TOTALPRICE
after the amount:2009/1/1 assets:euros €100 @@ $135 ; one hundred euros purchased at $135 for the lot assets:dollars
-
Specify amounts for all postings, using exactly two commodities, and let hledger infer the price that balances the transaction. Note the effect of posting order: the price is added to first posting, making it
€100 @@ $135
, as in example 2:2009/1/1 assets:euros €100 ; one hundred euros purchased assets:dollars $-135 ; for $135
Amounts can be converted to cost at report time using the
-B/--cost
flag; this is discussed more in the
ËœCOST REPORTING section.
Note that the cost normally should be a positive amount, though it's not required to be. This can be a little confusing, see discussion at --infer-market-prices: market prices from transactions.
Other cost/lot notations
A slight digression for Ledger and Beancount users. Ledger has a number of cost/lot-related notations:
@ UNITCOST
and@@ TOTALCOST
- expresses a conversion rate, as in hledger
- when buying, also creates a lot than can be selected at selling time
(@) UNITCOST
and(@@) TOTALCOST
(virtual cost)- like the above, but also means "this cost was exceptional, don't use it when inferring market prices".
Currently, hledger treats the above like @
and @@
; the parentheses
are ignored.
{=FIXEDUNITCOST}
and{{=FIXEDTOTALCOST}}
(fixed price)- when buying, means "this cost is also the fixed price, don't let it fluctuate in value reports"
{UNITCOST}
and{{TOTALCOST}}
(lot price)- can be used identically to
@ UNITCOST
and@@ TOTALCOST
, also creates a lot - when selling, combined with
@ ...
, specifies an investment lot by its cost basis; does not check if that lot is present
- can be used identically to
- and related:
[YYYY/MM/DD]
(lot date)- when buying, attaches this acquisition date to the lot
- when selling, selects a lot by its acquisition date
(SOME TEXT)
(lot note)- when buying, attaches this note to the lot
- when selling, selects a lot by its note
Currently, hledger accepts any or all of the above in any order after the posting amount, but ignores them. (This can break transaction balancing.)
For Beancount users, the notation and behaviour is different:
@ UNITCOST
and@@ TOTALCOST
- expresses a cost without creating a lot, as in hledger
- when buying (augmenting) or selling (reducing) a lot, combined
with
{...}
: documents the cost/selling price (not used for transaction balancing)
{UNITCOST}
and{{TOTALCOST}}
- when buying (augmenting), expresses the cost for transaction balancing, and also creates a lot with this cost basis attached
- when selling (reducing),
- selects a lot by its cost basis
- raises an error if that lot is not present or can not be selected unambiguously (depending on booking method configured)
- expresses the selling price for transaction balancing
Currently, hledger accepts the {UNITCOST}
/{{TOTALCOST}}
notation but
ignores it.
- variations:
{}
,{YYYY-MM-DD}
,{"LABEL"}
,{UNITCOST, "LABEL"}
,{UNITCOST, YYYY-MM-DD, "LABEL"}
etc.
Currently, hledger rejects these.
Balance assertions
hledger supports Ledger-style balance
assertions
in journal files. These look like, for example, = EXPECTEDBALANCE
following a posting's amount. Eg here we assert the expected dollar
balance in accounts a and b after each posting:
2013/1/1
a $1 =$1
b =$-1
2013/1/2
a $1 =$2
b $-1 =$-2
After reading a journal file, hledger will check all balance assertions
and report an error if any of them fail. Balance assertions can protect
you from, eg, inadvertently disrupting reconciled balances while
cleaning up old entries. You can disable them temporarily with the
-I/--ignore-assertions
flag, which can be useful for troubleshooting
or for reading Ledger files. (Note: this flag currently does not disable
balance assignments, described below).
Assertions and ordering
hledger sorts an account's postings and assertions first by date and then (for postings on the same day) by parse order. Note this is different from Ledger, which sorts assertions only by parse order. (Also, Ledger assertions do not see the accumulated effect of repeated postings to the same account within a transaction.)
So, hledger balance assertions keep working if you reorder differently-dated transactions within the journal. But if you reorder same-dated transactions or postings, assertions might break and require updating. This order dependence does bring an advantage: precise control over the order of postings and assertions within a day, so you can assert intra-day balances.
Assertions and multiple included files
Multiple files included with the include
directive
are processed as if concatenated into one file, preserving their order
and the posting order within each file. It means that balance assertions
in later files will see balance from earlier files.
And if you have multiple postings to an account on the same day, split across multiple files, and you want to assert the account's balance on that day, you'll need to put the assertion in the right file - the last one in the sequence, probably.
Assertions and multiple -f files
Unlike include
, when multiple files are specified on the command line
with multiple -f/--file
options, balance assertions will not see
balance from earlier files. This can be useful when you do not want
problems in earlier files to disrupt valid assertions in later files.
If you do want assertions to see balance from earlier files, use
include
, or concatenate the files temporarily.
Assertions and commodities
The asserted balance must be a simple single-commodity amount, and in fact the assertion checks only this commodity's balance within the (possibly multi-commodity) account balance. This is how assertions work in Ledger also. We could call this a "partial" balance assertion.
To assert the balance of more than one commodity in an account, you can write multiple postings, each asserting one commodity's balance.
You can make a stronger "total" balance assertion by writing a double
equals sign (== EXPECTEDBALANCE
). This asserts that there are no other
commodities in the account besides the asserted one (or at least, that
their balance is 0).
2013/1/1
a $1
a 1€
b $-1
c -1€
2013/1/2 ; These assertions succeed
a 0 = $1
a 0 = 1€
b 0 == $-1
c 0 == -1€
2013/1/3 ; This assertion fails as 'a' also contains 1€
a 0 == $1
It's not yet possible to make a complete assertion about a balance that has multiple commodities. One workaround is to isolate each commodity into its own subaccount:
2013/1/1
a:usd $1
a:euro 1€
b
2013/1/2
a 0 == 0
a:usd 0 == $1
a:euro 0 == 1€
Assertions and prices
Balance assertions ignore costs, and should normally be written without one:
2019/1/1
(a) $1 @ €1 = $1
We do allow prices to be written there, however, and print shows them, even though they don't affect whether the assertion passes or fails. This is for backward compatibility (hledger's close command used to generate balance assertions with prices), and because balance assignments do use them (see below).
Assertions and subaccounts
The balance assertions above (=
and ==
) do not count the balance
from subaccounts; they check the account's exclusive balance only. You
can assert the balance including subaccounts by writing =*
or ==*
,
eg:
2019/1/1
equity:opening balances
checking:a 5
checking:b 5
checking 1 ==* 11
Assertions and virtual postings
Balance assertions always consider both real and
virtual postings; they are not affected by the
--real/-R
flag or real:
query.
Assertions and auto postings
Balance assertions are affected by the --auto
flag, which generates
auto postings, which can alter account balances.
Because auto postings are optional in hledger, accounts affected by them
effectively have two balances. But balance assertions can only test one
or the other of these. So to avoid making fragile assertions, either:
- assert the balance calculated with
--auto
, and always use--auto
with that file - or assert the balance calculated without
--auto
, and never use--auto
with that file - or avoid balance assertions on accounts affected by auto postings (or avoid auto postings entirely).
Assertions and precision
Balance assertions compare the exactly calculated amounts, which are not always what is shown by reports. Eg a commodity directive may limit the display precision, but this will not affect balance assertions. Balance assertion failure messages show exact amounts.
Posting comments
Text following ;
, at the end of a posting line, and/or on indented
lines immediately below it, form comments for that posting. They are
reproduced by print
but otherwise ignored, except they may contain
tags, which are not ignored.
2012-01-01
expenses 1 ; a comment for posting 1
assets
; a comment for posting 2
; a second comment line for posting 2
Tags
Tags are a way to add extra labels or labelled data to transactions, postings, or accounts, which you can then search or pivot on.
They are written as a word (optionally hyphenated) immediately followed by a full colon, in a transaction or posting or account directive's comment. (This is an exception to the usual rule that things in comments are ignored.) Eg, here four different tags are recorded: one on the checking account, two on the transaction, and one on the expenses posting:
account assets:checking ; accounttag:
2017/1/16 bought groceries ; transactiontag-1:
; transactiontag-2:
assets:checking $-1
expenses:food $1 ; postingtag:
Postings also inherit tags from their transaction and their account. And transactions also acquire tags from their postings (and postings' accounts). So in the example above, the expenses posting effectively has all four tags (by inheriting from account and transaction), and the transaction also has all four tags (by acquiring from the expenses posting).
You can list tag names with hledger tags [NAMEREGEX]
, or match by tag
name with a tag:NAMEREGEX
query.
Tag values
Tags can have a value, which is any text after the colon up until a comma or end of line (with surrounding whitespace removed). Note this means that hledger tag values can not contain commas. Eg in the following posting, the three tags' values are "value 1", "value 2", and "" (empty) respectively:
expenses:food $10 ; foo, tag1: value 1 , tag2:value 2, bar tag3: , baz
Note that tags can be repeated, and are additive rather than overriding: when the same tag name is seen again with a new value, the new name:value pair is added to the tags. (It is not possible to override a tag's value or remove a tag.)
You can list a tag's values with hledger tags TAGNAME --values
, or
match by tag value with a tag:NAMEREGEX=VALUEREGEX
query.
Directives
Besides transactions, there is something else you can put in a journal
file: directives. These are declarations, beginning with a keyword, that
modify hledger's behaviour. Some directives can have more specific
subdirectives, indented below them. hledger's directives are similar to
Ledger's in many cases, but there are also many
differences. Directives are not required, but can be
useful. Here are the main directives:
purpose | directive |
---|---|
READING DATA: | |
Rewrite account names | alias |
Comment out sections of the file | comment |
Declare file's decimal mark, to help parse amounts accurately | decimal-mark |
Include other data files | include |
GENERATING DATA: | |
Generate recurring transactions or budget goals | ~ |
Generate extra postings on existing transactions | = |
CHECKING FOR ERRORS: | |
Define valid entities to provide more error checking | account , commodity , payee , tag |
REPORTING: | |
Declare accounts' type and display order | account |
Declare commodity display styles | commodity |
Declare market prices | P |
Directives and multiple files
Directives vary in their scope, ie which journal entries and which input
files they affect. Most often, a directive will affect the following
entries and included files if any, until the end of the current file -
and no further. You might find this inconvenient! For example, alias
directives do not affect parent or sibling
files. But there are usually workarounds;
for example, put alias
directives in your top-most file, before
including other files.
The restriction, though it may be annoying at first, is in a good cause; it allows reports to be stable and deterministic, independent of the order of input. Without it, reports could show different numbers depending on the order of -f options, or the positions of include directives in your files.
Directive effects
Here are all hledger's directives, with their effects and scope summarised - nine main directives, plus four others which we consider non-essential:
directive | what it does | ends at file end? |
---|---|---|
account | Declares an account, for checking all entries in all files; and its display order and type. Subdirectives: any text, ignored. | N |
alias | Rewrites account names, in following entries until end of current file or end aliases . Command line equivalent: --alias | Y |
comment | Ignores part of the journal file, until end of current file or end comment . | Y |
commodity | Declares up to four things: 1. a commodity symbol, for checking all amounts in all files 2. the decimal mark for parsing amounts of this commodity, in the following entries until end of current file (if there is no decimal-mark directive) 3. and the display style for amounts of this commodity 4. which is also the precision to use for balanced-transaction checking in this commodity. Takes precedence over D . Subdirectives: format (Ledger-compatible syntax). Command line equivalent: -c/--commodity-style | N, Y, N, N |
decimal-mark | Declares the decimal mark, for parsing amounts of all commodities in following entries until next decimal-mark or end of current file. Included files can override. Takes precedence over commodity and D . | Y |
include | Includes entries and directives from another file, as if they were written inline. Command line alternative: multiple -f/--file | N |
payee | Declares a payee name, for checking all entries in all files. | N |
P | Declares the market price of a commodity on some date, for value reports. | N |
~ (tilde) | Declares a periodic transaction rule that generates future transactions with --forecast and budget goals with balance --budget . | N |
Other syntax: | ||
apply account | Prepends a common parent account to all account names, in following entries until end of current file or end apply account . | Y |
D | Sets a default commodity to use for no-symbol amounts; and, if there is no commodity directive for this commodity: its decimal mark, balancing precision, and display style, as above. | Y, Y, N, N |
Y | Sets a default year to use for any yearless dates, in following entries until end of current file. | Y |
= (equals) | Declares an auto posting rule that generates extra postings on matched transactions with --auto , in current, parent, and child files (but not sibling files, see #1212). | partly |
Other Ledger directives | Other directives from Ledger's file format are accepted but ignored. |
account
directive
account
directives can be used to declare accounts (ie, the places
that amounts are transferred from and to). Though not required, these
declarations can provide several benefits:
- They can document your intended chart of accounts, providing a reference.
- In strict mode, they restrict which accounts may be posted to by transactions, which helps detect typos.
- They control account display order in reports, allowing non-alphabetic sorting (eg Revenues to appear above Expenses).
- They help with account name completion (in hledger add, hledger-web, hledger-iadd, ledger-mode, etc.)
- They can store additional account information as comments, or as tags which can be used to filter or pivot reports.
- They can help hledger know your accounts' types (asset, liability, equity, revenue, expense), affecting reports like balancesheet and incomestatement.
They are written as the word account
followed by a hledger-style
account name, eg:
account assets:bank:checking
Note, however, that accounts declared in account directives are not allowed to have surrounding brackets and parentheses, unlike accounts used in postings. So the following journal will not parse:
account (assets:bank:checking)
Account comments
Text following two or more spaces and ;
at the end of an account
directive line, and/or following ;
on indented lines immediately below
it, form comments for that account. They are ignored except they may
contain tags, which are not ignored.
The two-space requirement for same-line account comments is because ;
is allowed in account names.
account assets:bank:checking ; same-line comment, at least 2 spaces before the semicolon
; next-line comment
; some tags - type:A, acctnum:12345
Account subdirectives
Ledger-style indented subdirectives are also accepted, but currently ignored:
account assets:bank:checking
format subdirective is ignored
Account error checking
By default, accounts need not be declared; they come into existence when a posting references them. This is convenient, but it means hledger can't warn you when you mis-spell an account name in the journal. Usually you'll find that error later, as an extra account in balance reports, or an incorrect balance when reconciling.
In strict mode, enabled with the -s
/--strict
flag,
hledger will report an error if any transaction uses an account name
that has not been declared by an account directive. Some
notes:
- The declaration is case-sensitive; transactions must use the correct account name capitalisation.
- The account directive's scope is "whole file and below" (see directives). This means it affects all of the current file, and any files it includes, but not parent or sibling files. The position of account directives within the file does not matter, though it's usual to put them at the top.
- Accounts can only be declared in
journal
files, but will affect included files of all types. - It's currently not possible to declare "all possible subaccounts" with a wildcard; every account posted to must be declared.
Account display order
The order in which account directives are written influences the order in which accounts appear in reports, hledger-ui, hledger-web etc. By default accounts appear in alphabetical order, but if you add these account directives to the journal file:
account assets
account liabilities
account equity
account revenues
account expenses
those accounts will be displayed in declaration order:
$ hledger accounts -1
assets
liabilities
equity
revenues
expenses
Any undeclared accounts are displayed last, in alphabetical order.
Sorting is done at each level of the account tree, within each group of sibling accounts under the same parent. And currently, this directive:
account other:zoo
would influence the position of zoo
among other
's subaccounts, but
not the position of other
among the top-level accounts. This means:
- you will sometimes declare parent accounts (eg
account other
above) that you don't intend to post to, just to customize their display order - sibling accounts stay together (you couldn't display
x:y
in betweena:b
anda:c
).
Account types
hledger knows that accounts come in several types: assets, liabilities,
expenses and so on. This enables easy reports like
balancesheet and incomestatement,
and filtering by account type with the type:
query.
As a convenience, hledger will detect these account types automatically
if you are using common english-language top-level account names
(described below). But generally we recommend you declare types
explicitly, by adding a type:
tag to your top-level account
directives. Subaccounts will inherit the type of their parent. The
tag's value should be one of the five main account
types:
A
orAsset
(things you own)L
orLiability
(things you owe)E
orEquity
(investment/ownership; balanced counterpart of assets & liabilities)R
orRevenue
(what you received money from, AKA income; technically part of Equity)X
orExpense
(what you spend money on; technically part of Equity)
or, it can be (these are used less often):
C
orCash
(a subtype of Asset, indicating liquid assets for the cashflow report)V
orConversion
(a subtype of Equity, for conversions (see COST REPORTING).)
Here is a typical set of account type declarations:
account assets ; type: A
account liabilities ; type: L
account equity ; type: E
account revenues ; type: R
account expenses ; type: X
account assets:bank ; type: C
account assets:cash ; type: C
account equity:conversion ; type: V
Here are some tips for working with account types.
-
The rules for inferring types from account names are as follows. These are just a convenience that sometimes help new users get going; if they don't work for you, just ignore them and declare your account types. See also Regular expressions.
If account's name contains this (CI) regular expression: | its type is: --------------------------------------------------------------------|------------- ^assets?(:.+)?:(cash|bank|che(ck|que?)(ing)?|savings?|current)(:|$) | Cash ^assets?(:|$) | Asset ^(debts?|liabilit(y|ies))(:|$) | Liability ^equity:(trad(e|ing)|conversion)s?(:|$) | Conversion ^equity(:|$) | Equity ^(income|revenue)s?(:|$) | Revenue ^expenses?(:|$) | Expense
-
If you declare any account types, it's a good idea to declare an account for all of the account types, because a mixture of declared and name-inferred types can disrupt certain reports.
-
Certain uses of account aliases can disrupt account types. See Rewriting accounts > Aliases and account types.
-
As mentioned above, subaccounts will inherit a type from their parent account. More precisely, an account's type is decided by the first of these that exists:
- A
type:
declaration for this account. - A
type:
declaration in the parent accounts above it, preferring the nearest. - An account type inferred from this account's name.
- An account type inferred from a parent account's name, preferring the nearest parent.
- Otherwise, it will have no type.
- A
-
For troubleshooting, you can list accounts and their types with:
$ hledger accounts --types [ACCTPAT] [-DEPTH] [type:TYPECODES]
alias
directive
You can define account alias rules which rewrite your account names, or parts of them, before generating reports. This can be useful for:
- expanding shorthand account names to their full form, allowing easier data entry and a less verbose journal
- adapting old journals to your current chart of accounts
- experimenting with new account organisations, like a new hierarchy
- combining two accounts into one, eg to see their sum or difference on one line
- customising reports
Account aliases also rewrite account names in account directives. They do not affect account names being entered via hledger add or hledger-web.
Account aliases are very powerful. They are generally easy to use correctly, but you can also generate invalid account names with them; more on this below.
See also Rewrite account names.
Basic aliases
To set an account alias, use the alias
directive in your journal file.
This affects all subsequent journal entries in the current file or its
included files (but note: not sibling or parent
files). The spaces around the = are
optional:
alias OLD = NEW
Or, you can use the --alias 'OLD=NEW'
option on the command line. This
affects all entries. It's useful for trying out aliases interactively.
OLD and NEW are case sensitive full account names. hledger will replace any occurrence of the old account name with the new one. Subaccounts are also affected. Eg:
alias checking = assets:bank:wells fargo:checking
; rewrites "checking" to "assets:bank:wells fargo:checking", or "checking:a" to "assets:bank:wells fargo:checking:a"
Regex aliases
There is also a more powerful variant that uses a regular expression, indicated by wrapping the pattern in forward slashes. (This is the only place where hledger requires forward slashes around a regular expression.)
Eg:
alias /REGEX/ = REPLACEMENT
or:
$ hledger --alias '/REGEX/=REPLACEMENT' ...
Any part of an account name matched by REGEX will be replaced by REPLACEMENT. REGEX is case-insensitive as usual.
If you need to match a forward slash, escape it with a backslash, eg
/\/=:
.
If REGEX contains parenthesised match groups, these can be referenced by the usual backslash and number in REPLACEMENT:
alias /^(.+):bank:([^:]+):(.*)/ = \1:\2 \3
; rewrites "assets:bank:wells fargo:checking" to "assets:wells fargo checking"
REPLACEMENT continues to the end of line (or on command line, to end of option argument), so it can contain trailing whitespace.
Combining aliases
You can define as many aliases as you like, using journal directives and/or command line options.
Recursive aliases - where an account name is rewritten by one alias, then by another alias, and so on - are allowed. Each alias sees the effect of previously applied aliases.
In such cases it can be important to understand which aliases will be applied and in which order. For (each account name in) each journal entry, we apply:
alias
directives preceding the journal entry, most recently parsed first (ie, reading upward from the journal entry, bottom to top)--alias
options, in the order they appeared on the command line (left to right).
In other words, for (an account name in) a given journal entry:
- the nearest alias declaration before/above the entry is applied first
- the next alias before/above that will be be applied next, and so on
- aliases defined after/below the entry do not affect it.
This gives nearby aliases precedence over distant ones, and helps provide semantic stability - aliases will keep working the same way independent of which files are being read and in which order.
In case of trouble, adding --debug=6
to the command line will show
which aliases are being applied when.
Aliases and multiple files
As explained at Directives and multiple
files, alias
directives do not affect
parent or sibling files. Eg in this command,
hledger -f a.aliases -f b.journal
account aliases defined in a.aliases will not affect b.journal. Including the aliases doesn't work either:
include a.aliases
2023-01-01 ; not affected by a.aliases
foo 1
bar
This means that account aliases should usually be declared at the start of your top-most file, like this:
alias foo=Foo
alias bar=Bar
2023-01-01 ; affected by aliases above
foo 1
bar
include c.journal ; also affected
end aliases
directive
You can clear (forget) all currently defined aliases (seen in the journal so far, or defined on the command line) with this directive:
end aliases
Aliases can generate bad account names
Be aware that account aliases can produce malformed account names, which
could cause confusing reports or invalid print
output. For
example, you could erase all account names:
2021-01-01
a:aa 1
b
$ hledger print --alias '/.*/='
2021-01-01
1
The above print
output is not a valid journal. Or you could insert an
illegal double space, causing print
output that would give a different
journal when reparsed:
2021-01-01
old 1
other
$ hledger print --alias old="new USD" | hledger -f- print
2021-01-01
new USD 1
other
Aliases and account types
If an account with a type declaration (see Declaring accounts > Account types) is renamed by an alias, normally the account type remains in effect.
However, renaming in a way that reshapes the account tree (eg renaming parent accounts but not their children, or vice versa) could prevent child accounts from inheriting the account type of their parents.
Secondly, if an account's type is being inferred from its name, renaming it by an alias could prevent or alter that.
If you are using account aliases and the type:
query is
not matching accounts as you expect, try troubleshooting with the
accounts command, eg something like:
$ hledger accounts --alias assets=bassetts type:a
commodity
directive
You can use commodity
directives to declare your commodities. In fact
the commodity
directive performs several functions at once:
-
It declares commodities which may be used in the journal. This can optionally be enforced, providing useful error checking. (Cf Commodity error checking)
-
It declares which decimal mark character (period or comma), to expect when parsing input - useful to disambiguate international number formats in your data. Without this, hledger will parse both
1,000
and1.000
as 1. (Cf Amounts) -
It declares how to render the commodity's amounts when displaying output - the decimal mark, any digit group marks, the number of decimal places, symbol placement and so on. (Cf Commodity display style)
You will run into one of the problems solved by commodity directives sooner or later, so we recommend using them, for robust and predictable parsing and display.
Generally you should put them at the top of your journal file (since for function 2, they affect only following amounts, cf #793).
A commodity directive is just the word commodity
followed by a sample
amount, like this:
;commodity SAMPLEAMOUNT
commodity $1000.00
commodity 1,000.0000 AAAA ; optional same-line comment
It may also be written on multiple lines, and use the format
subdirective, as in Ledger. Note in this case the commodity symbol
appears twice; it must be the same in both places:
;commodity SYMBOL
; format SAMPLEAMOUNT
; display indian rupees with currency name on the left,
; thousands, lakhs and crores comma-separated,
; period as decimal point, and two decimal places.
commodity INR
format INR 1,00,00,000.00
Other indented subdirectives are currently ignored.
Remember that if the commodity symbol contains spaces, numbers, or punctuation, it must be enclosed in double quotes (cf Commodity).
The amount's quantity does not matter; only the format is significant. It must include a decimal mark - either a period or a comma - followed by 0 or more decimal digits.
A few more examples:
# number formats for $, EUR, INR and the no-symbol commodity:
commodity $1,000.00
commodity EUR 1.000,00
commodity INR 9,99,99,999.0
commodity 1 000 000.
Note hledger normally uses banker's rounding, so 0.5 displayed with zero decimal digits is "0". (More at Commodity display style.)
Even in the presence of commodity directives, the commodity display style can still be overridden by supplying a command line option.
Commodity error checking
In strict mode, enabled with the -s
/--strict
flag,
hledger will report an error if a commodity symbol is used that has not
been declared by a commodity
directive. This
works similarly to account error checking,
see the notes there for more details.
Note, this disallows amounts without a commodity symbol, because currently it's not possible (?) to declare the "no-symbol" commodity with a directive. This is one exception for convenience: zero amounts are always allowed to have no commodity symbol.
decimal-mark
directive
You can use a decimal-mark
directive - usually one per file, at the
top of the file - to declare which character represents a decimal mark
when parsing amounts in this file. It can look like
decimal-mark .
or
decimal-mark ,
This prevents any ambiguity when parsing numbers in the file, so we recommend it, especially if the file contains digit group marks (eg thousands separators).
include
directive
You can pull in the content of additional files by writing an include directive, like this:
include FILEPATH
Only journal files can include, and only journal, timeclock or timedot files can be included (not CSV files, currently).
If the file path does not begin with a slash, it is relative to the current file's folder.
A tilde means home directory, eg: include ~/main.journal
.
The path may contain glob
patterns
to match multiple files, eg: include *.journal
.
There is limited support for recursive wildcards: **/
(the slash is
required) matches 0 or more subdirectories. It's not super convenient
since you have to avoid include cycles and including directories, but
this can be done, eg: include */**/*.journal
.
The path may also be prefixed to force a specific file format,
overriding the file extension (as described in hledger.1 -> Input
files): include timedot:~/notes/2023*.md
.
P
directive
The P
directive declares a market price, which is a conversion rate
between two commodities on a certain date. This allows value
reports to convert amounts of one commodity to their value
in another, on or after that date. These prices are often obtained from
a stock exchange,
cryptocurrency
exchange, the or
foreign exchange
market.
The format is:
P DATE COMMODITY1SYMBOL COMMODITY2AMOUNT
DATE is a simple date, COMMODITY1SYMBOL is the symbol of the commodity being priced, and COMMODITY2AMOUNT is the amount (symbol and quantity) of commodity 2 that one unit of commodity 1 is worth on this date. Examples:
# one euro was worth $1.35 from 2009-01-01 onward:
P 2009-01-01 € $1.35
# and $1.40 from 2010-01-01 onward:
P 2010-01-01 € $1.40
The -V
, -X
and --value
flags use these market prices to show
amount values in another commodity. See Valuation.
payee
directive
payee PAYEE NAME
This directive can be used to declare a limited set of payees which may appear in transaction descriptions. The "payees" check will report an error if any transaction refers to a payee that has not been declared. Eg:
payee Whole Foods
Any indented subdirectives are currently ignored.
tag
directive
tag TAGNAME
This directive can be used to declare a limited set of tag names allowed in tags. TAGNAME should be a valid tag name (no spaces). Eg:
tag item-id
Any indented subdirectives are currently ignored.
The "tags" check will report an error if any undeclared tag name is used. It is quite easy to accidentally create a tag through normal use of colons in comments(#comments]; if you want to prevent this, you can declare and check your tags .
Periodic transactions
The ~
directive declares recurring transactions. Such directives allow
hledger to generate temporary future transactions (visible in reports,
not in the journal file) to help with forecasting or
budgeting.
Periodic transactions can be a little tricky, so before you use them, read this whole section, or at least these tips:
- Two spaces accidentally added or omitted will cause you trouble - read about this below.
- For troubleshooting, show the generated transactions with
hledger print --forecast tag:generated
orhledger register --forecast tag:generated
. - Forecasted transactions will begin only after the last non-forecasted transaction's date.
- Forecasted transactions will end 6 months from today, by default. See below for the exact start/end rules.
- period expressions can be tricky. Their documentation needs improvement, but is worth studying.
- Some period expressions with a repeating interval must begin on a
natural boundary of that interval. Eg in
weekly from DATE
, DATE must be a monday.~ weekly from 2019/10/1
(a tuesday) will give an error. - Other period expressions with an interval are automatically expanded
to cover a whole number of that interval. (This is done to improve
reports, but it also affects periodic transactions. Yes, it's a bit
inconsistent with the above.) Eg:
~ every 10th day of month from 2023/01
, which is equivalent to
~ every 10th day of month from 2023/01/01
, will be adjusted to start on 2019/12/10.
Periodic rule syntax
A periodic transaction rule looks like a normal journal entry, with the
date replaced by a tilde (~
) followed by a period
expression (mnemonic: ~
looks like a recurring
sine wave.):
# every first of month
~ monthly
expenses:rent $2000
assets:bank:checking
# every 15th of month in 2023's first quarter:
~ monthly from 2023-04-15 to 2023-06-16
expenses:utilities $400
assets:bank:checking
The period expression is the same syntax used for specifying multi-period reports, just interpreted differently; there, it specifies report periods; here it specifies recurrence dates (the periods' start dates).
Periodic rules and relative dates
Partial or relative dates (like 12/31
, 25
, tomorrow
, last week
,
next quarter
) are usually not recommended in periodic rules, since the
results will change as time passes. If used, they will be interpreted
relative to, in order of preference:
- the first day of the default year specified by a recent
Y
directive - or the date specified with
--today
- or the date on which you are running the report.
They will not be affected at all by report period or forecast period dates.
Two spaces between period expression and description!
If the period expression is followed by a transaction description, these must be separated by two or more spaces. This helps hledger know where the period expression ends, so that descriptions can not accidentally alter their meaning, as in this example:
; 2 or more spaces needed here, so the period is not understood as "every 2 months in 2023"
; ||
; vv
~ every 2 months in 2023, we will review
assets:bank:checking $1500
income:acme inc
So,
- Do write two spaces between your period expression and your transaction description, if any.
- Don't accidentally write two spaces in the middle of your period expression.
Auto postings
The =
directive declares a rule for generating temporary extra
postings on transactions. Wherever the rule matches an existing posting,
it can add one or more companion postings below that one, optionally
influenced by the matched posting's amount. This can be useful for
generating tax postings with a standard percentage, for example.
Note that depending on generated data is not ideal for financial records
(it's less portable, less future-proof, less auditable by others, and
less robust, since other features like balance assertions will depend on
using or not using --auto
).
An auto posting rule looks a bit like a transaction:
= QUERY
ACCOUNT AMOUNT
...
ACCOUNT [AMOUNT]
except the first line is an equals sign (mnemonic: =
suggests
matching), followed by a query (which matches existing
postings), and each "posting" line describes a posting to be
generated, and the posting amounts can be:
- a normal amount with a commodity symbol, eg
$2
. This will be used as-is. - a number, eg
2
. The commodity symbol (if any) from the matched posting will be added to this. - a numeric multiplier, eg
*2
(a star followed by a number N). The matched posting's amount (and total price, if any) will be multiplied by N. - a multiplier with a commodity symbol, eg
*$2
(a star, number N, and symbol S). The matched posting's amount will be multiplied by N, and its commodity symbol will be replaced with S.
Any query term containing spaces must be enclosed in single or double quotes, as on the command line. Eg, note the quotes around the second query term below:
= expenses:groceries 'expenses:dining out'
(budget:funds:dining out) *-1
Some examples:
; every time I buy food, schedule a dollar donation
= expenses:food
(liabilities:charity) $-1
; when I buy a gift, also deduct that amount from a budget envelope subaccount
= expenses:gifts
assets:checking:gifts *-1
assets:checking *1
2017/12/1
expenses:food $10
assets:checking
2017/12/14
expenses:gifts $20
assets:checking
$ hledger print --auto
2017-12-01
expenses:food $10
assets:checking
(liabilities:charity) $-1
2017-12-14
expenses:gifts $20
assets:checking
assets:checking:gifts -$20
assets:checking $20
Auto postings and multiple files
An auto posting rule can affect any transaction in the current file, or
in any parent file or child file. Note, currently it will not affect
sibling files (when multiple -f
/--file
are used - see
#1212).
Auto postings and dates
A posting date (or secondary date) in the matched posting, or (taking precedence) a posting date in the auto posting rule itself, will also be used in the generated posting.
Auto postings and transaction balancing / inferred amounts / balance assertions
Currently, auto postings are added:
- after missing amounts are inferred, and transactions are checked for balancedness,
- but before balance assertions are checked.
Note this means that journal entries must be balanced both before and after auto postings are added. This changed in hledger 1.12+; see #893 for background.
This also means that you cannot have more than one auto-posting with a missing amount applied to a given transaction, as it will be unable to infer amounts.
Auto posting tags
Automated postings will have some extra tags:
generated-posting:= QUERY
- shows this was generated by an auto posting rule, and the query_generated-posting:= QUERY
- a hidden tag, which does not appear in hledger's output. This can be used to match postings generated "just now", rather than generated in the past and saved to the journal.
Also, any transaction that has been changed by auto posting rules will have these tags added:
modified:
- this transaction was modified_modified:
- a hidden tag not appearing in the comment; this transaction was modified "just now".
Auto postings on forecast transactions only
Tip: you can can make auto postings that will apply to forecast
transactions but not recorded transactions, by adding
tag:_generated-transaction
to their QUERY. This can be useful when
generating new journal entries to be saved in the journal.
Other syntax
hledger journal format supports quite a few other features, mainly to make interoperating with or converting from Ledger easier. Note some of the features below are powerful and can be useful in special cases, but in general, features in this section are considered less important or even not recommended for most users. Downsides are mentioned to help you decide if you want to use them.
Balance assignments
Ledger-style balance assignments are also supported. These are like balance assertions, but with no posting amount on the left side of the equals sign; instead it is calculated automatically so as to satisfy the assertion. This can be a convenience during data entry, eg when setting opening balances:
; starting a new journal, set asset account balances
2016/1/1 opening balances
assets:checking = $409.32
assets:savings = $735.24
assets:cash = $42
equity:opening balances
or when adjusting a balance to reality:
; no cash left; update balance, record any untracked spending as a generic expense
2016/1/15
assets:cash = $0
expenses:misc
The calculated amount depends on the account's balance in the commodity at that point (which depends on the previously-dated postings of the commodity to that account since the last balance assertion or assignment).
Downsides: using balance assignments makes your journal less explicit; to know the exact amount posted, you have to run hledger or do the calculations yourself, instead of just reading it. Also balance assignments' forcing of balances can hide errors. These things make your financial data less portable, less future-proof, and less trustworthy in an audit.
Balance assignments and prices
A cost in a balance assignment will cause the calculated amount to have that price attached:
2019/1/1
(a) = $1 @ €2
$ hledger print --explicit
2019-01-01
(a) $1 @ €2 = $1 @ €2
Bracketed posting dates
For setting posting dates and secondary posting
dates, Ledger's bracketed date syntax is also
supported: [DATE]
, [DATE=DATE2]
or [=DATE2]
in posting comments.
hledger will attempt to parse any square-bracketed sequence of the
0123456789/-.=
characters in this way. With this syntax, DATE infers
its year from the transaction and DATE2 infers its year from DATE.
Downsides: another syntax to learn, redundant with hledger's
date:
/date2:
tags, and confusingly similar to Ledger's lot date
syntax.
D
directive
D AMOUNT
This directive sets a default commodity, to be used for any subsequent
commodityless amounts (ie, plain numbers) seen while parsing the
journal. This effect lasts until the next D
directive, or the end of
the journal.
For compatibility/historical reasons, D
also acts like a commodity
directive (setting the commodity's decimal mark
for parsing and display style for output). So
its argument is not just a commodity symbol, but a full amount
demonstrating the style. The amount must include a decimal mark (either
period or comma). Eg:
; commodity-less amounts should be treated as dollars
; (and displayed with the dollar sign on the left, thousands separators and two decimal places)
D $1,000.00
1/1
a 5 ; <- commodity-less amount, parsed as $5 and displayed as $5.00
b
Interactions with other directives:
For setting a commodity's display style, a commodity
directive has
highest priority, then a D
directive.
For detecting a commodity's decimal mark during parsing, decimal-mark
has highest priority, then commodity
, then D
.
For checking commodity symbols with the check command, a
commodity
directive is required (hledger check commodities
ignores
D
directives).
Downsides: omitting commodity symbols makes your financial data less
explicit, less portable, and less trustworthy in an audit. It is usually
an unsustainable shortcut; sooner or later you will want to track
multiple commodities. D is overloaded with functions redundant with
commodity
and decimal-mark
. And it works differently from Ledger's
D
.
apply account
directive
This directive sets a default parent account, which will be prepended to
all accounts in following entries, until an end apply account
directive or end of current file. Eg:
apply account home
2010/1/1
food $10
cash
end apply account
is equivalent to:
2010/01/01
home:food $10
home:cash $-10
account
directives are also affected, and so is any include
d
content.
Account names entered via hledger add or hledger-web are not affected.
Account aliases, if any, are applied after the parent account is prepended.
Downsides: this can make your financial data less explicit, less portable, and less trustworthy in an audit.
Y
directive
Y YEAR
or (deprecated backward-compatible forms):
year YEAR
apply year YEAR
The space is optional. This sets a default year to be used for subsequent dates which don't specify a year. Eg:
Y2009 ; set default year to 2009
12/15 ; equivalent to 2009/12/15
expenses 1
assets
year 2010 ; change default year to 2010
2009/1/30 ; specifies the year, not affected
expenses 1
assets
1/31 ; equivalent to 2010/1/31
expenses 1
assets
Downsides: omitting the year (from primary transaction dates, at least) makes your financial data less explicit, less portable, and less trustworthy in an audit. Such dates can get separated from their corresponding Y directive, eg when evaluating a region of the journal in your editor. A missing Y directive makes reports dependent on today's date.
Secondary dates
A secondary date is written after the primary date, following an equals
sign. If the year is omitted, the primary date's year is assumed. When
running reports, the primary (left) date is used by default, but with
the --date2
flag (or --aux-date
or --effective
), the secondary
(right) date will be used instead.
The meaning of secondary dates is up to you, but it's best to follow a consistent rule. Eg "primary = the bank's clearing date, secondary = date the transaction was initiated, if different".
Downsides: makes your financial data more complicated, less portable, and less trustworthy in an audit. Keeping the meaning of the two dates consistent requires discipline, and you have to remember which reporting mode is appropriate for a given report. Posting dates are simpler and better.
Star comments
Lines beginning with *
(star/asterisk) are also comment lines. This
feature allows Emacs users to insert org headings in their journal,
allowing them to fold/unfold/navigate it like an outline when viewed
with org mode.
Downsides: another, unconventional comment syntax to learn. Decreases your journal's portability. And switching to Emacs org mode just for folding/unfolding meant losing the benefits of ledger mode; nowadays you can add outshine mode to ledger mode to get folding without losing ledger mode's features.
Valuation expressions
Ledger allows a valuation function or value to be written in double parentheses after an amount. hledger ignores these.
Virtual postings
A posting with parentheses around the account name ((some:account)
) is
called a unbalanced virtual posting. Such postings do not participate
in transaction balancing. (And if you write them without an amount, a
zero amount is always inferred.) These can occasionally be convenient
for special circumstances, but they violate double entry bookkeeping and
make your data less portable across applications, so many people avoid
using them at all.
A posting with brackets around the account name ([some:account]
) is
called a balanced virtual posting. The balanced virtual postings in a
transaction must add up to zero, just like ordinary postings, but
separately from them. These are not part of double entry bookkeeping
either, but they are at least balanced. An example:
2022-01-01 buy food with cash, update budget envelope subaccounts, & something else
assets:cash $-10 ; <- these balance each other
expenses:food $7 ; <-
expenses:food $3 ; <-
[assets:checking:budget:food] $-10 ; <- and these balance each other
[assets:checking:available] $10 ; <-
(something:else) $5 ; <- this is not required to balance
Ordinary postings, whose account names are neither parenthesised nor
bracketed, are called real postings. You can exclude virtual postings
from reports with the -R/--real
flag or a real:1
query.
Other Ledger directives
These other Ledger directives are currently accepted but ignored. This allows hledger to read more Ledger files, but be aware that hledger's reports may differ from Ledger's if you use these.
apply fixed COMM AMT
apply tag TAG
assert EXPR
bucket / A ACCT
capture ACCT REGEX
check EXPR
define VAR=EXPR
end apply fixed
end apply tag
end apply year
end tag
eval / expr EXPR
python
PYTHONCODE
tag NAME
value EXPR
--command-line-flags
See also https://hledger.org/ledger.html for a detailed hledger/Ledger syntax comparison.
CSV
hledger can read CSV files (Character Separated Value - usually comma, semicolon, or tab) containing dated records, automatically converting each record into a transaction.
(To learn about writing CSV, see CSV output.)
For best error messages when reading CSV/TSV/SSV files, make sure they
have a corresponding .csv
, .tsv
or .ssv
file extension or use a
hledger file prefix (see File Extension below).
Each CSV file must be described by a corresponding rules file.
This contains rules describing the CSV data (header line, fields layout,
date format etc.), how to construct hledger transactions from it, and
how to categorise transactions based on description or other attributes.
By default hledger looks for a rules file named like the CSV file with
an extra .rules
extension, in the same directory. Eg when asked to
read foo/FILE.csv
, hledger looks for foo/FILE.csv.rules
. You can
specify a different rules file with the --rules-file
option. If no
rules file is found, hledger will create a sample rules file, which
you'll need to adjust.
At minimum, the rules file must identify the date and amount fields, and often it also specifies the date format and how many header lines there are. Here's a simple CSV file and a rules file for it:
Date, Description, Id, Amount
12/11/2019, Foo, 123, 10.23
# basic.csv.rules
skip 1
fields date, description, , amount
date-format %d/%m/%Y
$ hledger print -f basic.csv
2019-11-12 Foo
expenses:unknown 10.23
income:unknown -10.23
There's an introductory Importing CSV data tutorial on hledger.org, and more CSV rules examples below, and a larger collection at https://github.com/simonmichael/hledger/tree/master/examples/csv.
CSV rules cheatsheet
The following kinds of rule can appear in the rules file, in any order.
(Blank lines and lines beginning with #
or ;
or *
are ignored.)
source | optionally declare which file to read data from |
separator | declare the field separator, instead of relying on file extension |
skip | skip one or more header lines at start of file |
date-format | declare how to parse CSV dates/date-times |
timezone | declare the time zone of ambiguous CSV date-times |
newest-first | improve txn order when: there are multiple records, newest first, all with the same date |
intra-day-reversed | improve txn order when: same-day txns are in opposite order to the overall file |
decimal-mark | declare the decimal mark used in CSV amounts, when ambiguous |
fields list | name CSV fields for easy reference, and optionally assign their values to hledger fields |
Field assignment | assign a CSV value or interpolated text value to a hledger field |
if block | conditionally assign values to hledger fields, or skip a record or end (skip rest of file) |
if table | conditionally assign values to hledger fields, using compact syntax |
balance-type | select which type of balance assertions/assignments to generate |
include | inline another CSV rules file |
Working with CSV tips can be found below, including How CSV rules are evaluated.
source
If you tell hledger to read a csv file with -f foo.csv
, it will look
for rules in foo.csv.rules
. Or, you can tell it to read the rules
file, with -f foo.csv.rules
, and it will look for data in foo.csv
(since 1.30).
These are mostly equivalent, but the second method provides some extra features. For one, the data file can be missing, without causing an error; it is just considered empty. And, you can specify a different data file by adding a "source" rule:
source ./Checking1.csv
If you specify just a file name with no path, hledger will look for it
in your system's downloads directory (~/Downloads
, currently):
source Checking1.csv
And if you specify a glob pattern, hledger will read the most recent of the matched files (useful with repeated downloads):
source Checking1*.csv
See also "Working with CSV > Reading files specified by rule".
separator
You can use the separator
rule to read other kinds of
character-separated data. The argument is any single separator
character, or the words tab
or space
(case insensitive). Eg, for
comma-separated values (CSV):
separator ,
or for semicolon-separated values (SSV):
separator ;
or for tab-separated values (TSV):
separator TAB
If the input file has a .csv
, .ssv
or .tsv
file
extension (or a csv:
, ssv:
, tsv:
prefix), the
appropriate separator will be inferred automatically, and you won't
need this rule.
skip
skip N
The word skip
followed by a number (or no number, meaning 1) tells
hledger to ignore this many non-empty lines at the start of the input
data. You'll need this whenever your CSV data contains header lines.
Note, empty and blank lines are skipped automatically, so you don't
need to count those.
skip
has a second meaning: it can be used inside if
blocks (described below), to skip one or more records
whenever the condition is true. Records skipped in this way are ignored,
except they are still required to be valid CSV.
date-format
date-format DATEFMT
This is a helper for the date
(and date2
) fields. If your CSV dates
are not formatted like YYYY-MM-DD
, YYYY/MM/DD
or YYYY.MM.DD
,
you'll need to add a date-format rule describing them with a
strptime-style date parsing pattern - see
https://hackage.haskell.org/package/time/docs/Data-Time-Format.html#v:formatTime.
The pattern must parse the CSV date value completely. Some examples:
# MM/DD/YY
date-format %m/%d/%y
# D/M/YYYY
# The - makes leading zeros optional.
date-format %-d/%-m/%Y
# YYYY-Mmm-DD
date-format %Y-%h-%d
# M/D/YYYY HH:MM AM some other junk
# Note the time and junk must be fully parsed, though only the date is used.
date-format %-m/%-d/%Y %l:%M %p some other junk
timezone
timezone TIMEZONE
When CSV contains date-times that are implicitly in some time zone other than yours, but containing no explicit time zone information, you can use this rule to declare the CSV's native time zone, which helps prevent off-by-one dates.
When the CSV date-times do contain time zone information, you don't
need this rule; instead, use %Z
in date-format
(or %z
, %EZ
,
%Ez
; see the formatTime link above).
In either of these cases, hledger will do a time-zone-aware conversion, localising the CSV date-times to your current system time zone. If you prefer to localise to some other time zone, eg for reproducibility, you can (on unix at least) set the output timezone with the TZ environment variable, eg:
$ TZ=-1000 hledger print -f foo.csv # or TZ=-1000 hledger import foo.csv
timezone
currently does not understand timezone names, except "UTC",
"GMT", "EST", "EDT", "CST", "CDT", "MST", "MDT", "PST",
or "PDT". For others, use numeric format: +HHMM or -HHMM.
newest-first
hledger tries to ensure that the generated transactions will be ordered chronologically, including intra-day transactions. Usually it can auto-detect how the CSV records are ordered. But if it encounters CSV where all records are on the same date, it assumes that the records are oldest first. If in fact the CSV's records are normally newest first, like:
2022-10-01, txn 3...
2022-10-01, txn 2...
2022-10-01, txn 1...
you can add the newest-first
rule to help hledger generate the
transactions in correct order.
# same-day CSV records are newest first
newest-first
intra-day-reversed
CSV records for each day are sometimes ordered in reverse compared to the overall date order. Eg, here dates are newest first, but the transactions on each date are oldest first:
2022-10-02, txn 3...
2022-10-02, txn 4...
2022-10-01, txn 1...
2022-10-01, txn 2...
In this situation, add the intra-day-reversed
rule, and hledger will
compensate, improving the order of transactions.
# transactions within each day are reversed with respect to the overall date order
intra-day-reversed
decimal-mark
decimal-mark .
or:
decimal-mark ,
hledger automatically accepts either period or comma as a decimal mark when parsing numbers (cf Amounts). However if any numbers in the CSV contain digit group marks, such as thousand-separating commas, you should declare the decimal mark explicitly with this rule, to avoid misparsed numbers.
fields
list
fields FIELDNAME1, FIELDNAME2, ...
A fields list (the word fields
followed by comma-separated field
names) is optional, but convenient. It does two things:
-
It names the CSV field in each column. This can be convenient if you are referencing them in other rules, so you can say
%SomeField
instead of remembering%13
. -
Whenever you use one of the special hledger field names (described below), it assigns the CSV value in this position to that hledger field. This is the quickest way to populate hledger's fields and build a transaction.
Here's an example that says "use the 1st, 2nd and 4th fields as the transaction's date, description and amount; name the last two fields for later reference; and ignore the others":
fields date, description, , amount, , , somefield, anotherfield
In a fields list, the separator is always comma; it is unrelated to the CSV file's separator. Also:
- There must be least two items in the list (at least one comma).
- Field names may not contain spaces. Spaces before/after field names are optional.
- Field names may contain
_
(underscore) or-
(hyphen). - Fields you don't care about can be given a dummy name or an empty name.
If the CSV contains column headings, it's convenient to use these for your field names, suitably modified (eg lower-cased with spaces replaced by underscores).
Sometimes you may want to alter a CSV field name to avoid assigning to a
hledger field with the same name. Eg you could call the CSV's
"balance" field balance_
to avoid directly setting hledger's
balance
field (and generating a balance assertion).
Field assignment
HLEDGERFIELD FIELDVALUE
Field assignments are the more flexible way to assign CSV values to hledger fields. They can be used instead of or in addition to a fields list (see above).
To assign a value to a hledger field, write the field
name (any of the standard hledger field/pseudo-field
names, defined below), a space, followed by a text value on the same
line. This text value may interpolate CSV fields, referenced by their
1-based position in the CSV record (%N
), or by the name they were
given in the fields list (%CSVFIELD
).
Some examples:
# set the amount to the 4th CSV field, with " USD" appended
amount %4 USD
# combine three fields to make a comment, containing note: and date: tags
comment note: %somefield - %anotherfield, date: %1
Tips:
- Interpolation strips outer whitespace (so a CSV value like
" 1 "
becomes1
when interpolated) (#1051). - Interpolations always refer to a CSV field - you can't interpolate a hledger field. (See Referencing other fields below).
Field names
Note the two kinds of field names mentioned here, and used only in hledger CSV rules files:
-
CSV field names (
CSVFIELD
in these docs): you can optionally name the CSV columns for easy reference (since hledger doesn't yet automatically recognise column headings in a CSV file), by writing arbitrary names in afields
list, eg:fields When, What, Some_Id, Net, Total, Foo, Bar
-
Special hledger field names (
HLEDGERFIELD
in these docs): you must set at least some of these to generate the hledger transaction from a CSV record, by writing them as the left hand side of a field assignment, eg:date %When code %Some_Id description %What comment %Foo %Bar amount1 $ %Total
or directly in a
fields
list:fields date, description, code, , amount1, Foo, Bar currency $ comment %Foo %Bar
Here are all the special hledger field names available, and what happens when you assign values to them:
date field
Assigning to date
sets the transaction date.
date2 field
date2
sets the transaction's secondary date, if
any.
status field
status
sets the transaction's status, if any.
code field
code
sets the transaction's code, if any.
description field
description
sets the transaction's description, if
any.
comment field
comment
sets the transaction's comment, if
any.
commentN
, where N is a number, sets the Nth posting's comment.
You can assign multi-line comments by writing literal \n
in the code.
A comment starting with \n
will begin on a new line.
Comments can contain tags, as usual.
account field
Assigning to accountN
, where N is 1 to 99, sets the account name of
the Nth posting, and causes that posting to be generated.
Most often there are two postings, so you'll want to set account1
and
account2
. Typically account1
is associated with the CSV file, and is
set once with a top-level assignment, while account2
is set based on
each transaction's description, in conditional rules.
If a posting's account name is left unset but its amount is set (see below), a default account name will be chosen (like "expenses:unknown" or "income:unknown").
amount field
Amount setting can get a bit complex. Assigning to amount
is
sufficient for simple transactions, but there are four field name
variants you can use for different situations:
-
amountN
sets a specific posting's amount from one CSV field or arbitrary value.
Assigning toamountN
sets the amount of the Nth posting - and also causes that posting to be generated. N is most often 1 or 2 but can go up to 99, potentially generating a 99-posting transaction. (Posting numbers don't have to be consecutive; higher posting numbers can sometimes be useful with conditional rules, to ensure a certain ordering of postings.) -
amountN-in/-out
sets a specific posting's amount from two CSV fields.
When the amount is provided as two CSV fields - "Debit"/"Credit", "Deposit"/"Withdrawal", "Money In"/"Money Out" or similar - assign those fields toamountN-in
andamountN-out
respectively (or possibly the other way round, depending on signs). This will set the Nth posting's amount to whichever of the two CSV field values is non-zero. Some notes:- Don't mix
amountN
andamountN-in
/-out
. When you have one CSV amount field, useamountN
. When you have two CSV amount fields, useamountN-in
/amountN-out
. amountN-in
andamountN-out
are always used together, as a pair. Assign to both of them.- They do not generate two separate postings; rather, they generate the Nth posting's single amount, from the value found in one or other of the two CSV fields.
- In each record, at least one of the two CSV fields must contain a zero amount or be empty.
- hledger assumes the two CSV fields contain unsigned numbers, and it will automatically negate the -out amount.
- This variant can be convenient, but it doesn't handle every
two-amount-field situation; if you need more flexibility, use an
if
rule (see "Setting amounts" below).
- Don't mix
The other two variants are older and considered legacy syntax, but can still be convenient sometimes:
-
amount
sets posting 1 and 2's amounts from one CSV field or value.
Assigning toamount
, with no posting number,- sets posting 1's amount (like
amount1
) - sets posting 2's amount to the same amount but with opposite sign; and also converts it to cost if it has a cost price
- can be overridden by
amount1
and/oramount2
assignments. (This helps with incremental migration of old rules files to the newer syntax.)
- sets posting 1's amount (like
-
amount-in/-out
sets posting 1 and 2's amounts from two CSV fields.
Assigningamount-in
andamount-out
, with no posting numbers, to two CSV fields reads whichever of the two values is non-zero as the amount, and then sets the first two posting amounts as above.
We recommend using only one of these variants within a rules file,
rather than mixing them. And remember that a fields
list can also do
assignments, so eg naming a CSV field "amount" counts as an assignment
to amount
; if you don't want that, call it something else, like
"amount_".
In addition to this section, please see also the tips beginning at "Working with CSV > Setting amounts" below.
currency field
currency
sets a currency symbol, to be prepended to all postings'
amounts. You can use this if the CSV amounts do not have a currency
symbol, eg if it is in a separate column.
currencyN
prepends a currency symbol to just the Nth posting's
amount.
balance field
balanceN
sets a balance assertion amount (or if
the posting amount is left empty, a balance
assignment) on posting N.
balance
is a compatibility spelling for hledger <1.17; it is
equivalent to balance1
.
You can adjust the type of assertion/assignment with the balance-type
rule (see below).
See Tips below for more about setting amounts and currency.
if
block
Rules can be applied conditionally, depending on patterns in the CSV data. This allows flexibility; in particular, it is how you can categorise transactions, selecting an appropriate account name based on their description (for example). There are two ways to write conditional rules: "if blocks", described here, and "if tables", described below.
An if block is the word if
and one or more "matcher" expressions
(can be a word or phrase), one per line, starting either on the same or
next line; followed by one or more indented rules. Eg,
if MATCHER
RULE
or
if
MATCHER
MATCHER
MATCHER
RULE
RULE
If any of the matchers succeeds, all of the indented rules will be applied. They are usually field assignments, but the following special rules may also be used within an if block:
skip
- skips the matched CSV record (generating no transaction from it)end
- skips the rest of the current CSV file.
Some examples:
# if the record contains "groceries", set account2 to "expenses:groceries"
if groceries
account2 expenses:groceries
# if the record contains any of these phrases, set account2 and a transaction comment as shown
if
monthly service fee
atm transaction fee
banking thru software
account2 expenses:business:banking
comment XXX deductible ? check it
# if an empty record is seen (assuming five fields), ignore the rest of the CSV file
if ,,,,
end
Matchers
There are two kinds:
-
A record matcher is a word or single-line text fragment or regular expression (
REGEX
), which hledger will try to match case-insensitively anywhere within the CSV record.
Eg:whole foods
-
A field matcher is preceded with a percent sign and CSV field name (
%CSVFIELD REGEX
). hledger will try to match these just within the named CSV field.
Eg:%date 2023
The regular expression is (as usual in hledger) a POSIX extended regular
expression, that also supports GNU word boundaries (\b
, \B
, \<
,
\>
), and nothing else. If you have trouble, see "Regular
expressions" in the hledger manual
(https://hledger.org/hledger.html#regular-expressions).
With record matchers, it's important to know that the record matched is not the original CSV record, but a modified one: separators will be converted to commas, and enclosing double quotes (but not enclosing whitespace) are removed. So for example, when reading an SSV file, if the original record was:
2023-01-01; "Acme, Inc."; 1,000
the regex would see, and try to match, this modified record text:
2023-01-01,Acme, Inc., 1,000
When an if block has multiple matchers, they are combined as follows:
- By default they are OR'd (any one of them can match)
- When a matcher is preceded by ampersand (
&
) it will be AND'ed with the previous matcher (both of them must match).
There's not yet an easy syntax to negate a matcher.
if
table
"if tables" are an alternative to if blocks; they can express many matchers and field assignments in a more compact tabular format, like this:
if,HLEDGERFIELD1,HLEDGERFIELD2,...
MATCHERA,VALUE1,VALUE2,...
MATCHERB,VALUE1,VALUE2,...
MATCHERC,VALUE1,VALUE2,...
<empty line>
The first character after if
is taken to be the separator for the rest
of the table. It should be a non-alphanumeric character like ,
or |
that does not appear anywhere else in the table. (Note: it is unrelated
to the CSV file's separator.) Whitespace can be used in the matcher
lines for readability, but not in the if line currently. The table must
be terminated by an empty line (or end of file). Each line must contain
the same number of separators; empty values are allowed.
The above means: try all of the matchers; whenever a matcher succeeds, assign all of the values on that line to the corresponding hledger fields; later lines can overrider earlier ones. It is equivalent to this sequence of if blocks:
if MATCHERA
HLEDGERFIELD1 VALUE1
HLEDGERFIELD2 VALUE2
...
if MATCHERB
HLEDGERFIELD1 VALUE1
HLEDGERFIELD2 VALUE2
...
if MATCHERC
HLEDGERFIELD1 VALUE1
HLEDGERFIELD2 VALUE2
...
Example:
if,account2,comment
atm transaction fee,expenses:business:banking,deductible? check it
%description groceries,expenses:groceries,
2023/01/12.*Plumbing LLC,expenses:house:upkeep,emergency plumbing call-out
balance-type
Balance assertions generated by assigning to
balanceN are of the simple =
type by default,
which is a single-commodity,
subaccount-excluding assertion. You may
find the subaccount-including variants more useful, eg if you have
created some virtual subaccounts of checking to help with budgeting. You
can select a different type of assertion with the balance-type
rule:
# balance assertions will consider all commodities and all subaccounts
balance-type ==*
Here are the balance assertion types for quick reference:
= single commodity, exclude subaccounts
=* single commodity, include subaccounts
== multi commodity, exclude subaccounts
==* multi commodity, include subaccounts
include
include RULESFILE
This includes the contents of another CSV rules file at this point.
RULESFILE
is an absolute file path or a path relative to the current
file's directory. This can be useful for sharing common rules between
several rules files, eg:
# someaccount.csv.rules
## someaccount-specific rules
fields date,description,amount
account1 assets:someaccount
account2 expenses:misc
## common rules
include categorisation.rules
Working with CSV
Some tips:
Rapid feedback
It's a good idea to get rapid feedback while creating/troubleshooting CSV rules. Here's a good way, using entr from eradman.com/entrproject:
$ ls foo.csv* | entr bash -c 'echo ----; hledger -f foo.csv print desc:SOMEDESC'
A desc: query (eg) is used to select just one, or a few, transactions of interest. "bash -c" is used to run multiple commands, so we can echo a separator each time the command re-runs, making it easier to read the output.
Valid CSV
Note that hledger will only accept valid CSV conforming to RFC 4180, and equivalent SSV and TSV formats (like RFC 4180 but with semicolon or tab as separators). This means, eg:
- Values may be enclosed in double quotes, or not. Enclosing in single
quotes is not allowed. (Eg
'A','B'
is rejected.) - When values are enclosed in double quotes, spaces outside the quotes
are not
allowed.
(Eg
"A", "B"
is rejected.) - When values are not enclosed in quotes, they may not contain double
quotes. (Eg
A"A, B
is rejected.)
If your CSV/SSV/TSV is not valid in this sense, you'll need to transform it before reading with hledger. Try using sed, or a more permissive CSV parser like python's csv lib.
File Extension
To help hledger choose the CSV file reader and show the right error
messages (and choose the right field separator character by default),
it's best if CSV/SSV/TSV files are named with a .csv
, .ssv
or
.tsv
filename extension. (More about this at Data
formats.)
When reading files with the "wrong" extension, you can ensure the CSV
reader (and the default field separator) by prefixing the file path with
csv:
, ssv:
or tsv:
: Eg:
$ hledger -f ssv:foo.dat print
You can also override the default field separator with a separator rule if needed.
Reading CSV from standard input
You'll need the file format prefix when reading CSV from stdin also, since hledger assumes journal format by default. Eg:
$ cat foo.dat | hledger -f ssv:- print
Reading multiple CSV files
If you use multiple -f
options to read multiple CSV files at once,
hledger will look for a correspondingly-named rules file for each CSV
file. But if you use the --rules-file
option, that rules file will be
used for all the CSV files.
Reading files specified by rule
Instead of specifying a CSV file in the command line, you can specify a
rules file, as in hledger -f foo.csv.rules CMD
. By default this will
read data from foo.csv in the same directory, but you can add a
source rule to specify a different data file, perhaps located
in your web browser's download directory.
This feature was added in hledger 1.30, so you won't see it in most CSV
rules examples. But it helps remove some of the busywork of managing CSV
downloads. Most of your financial institutions's default CSV filenames
are different and can be recognised by a glob pattern. So you can put a
rule like source Checking1*.csv
in foo-checking.csv.rules, and then
periodically follow a workflow like:
- Download CSV from Foo's website, using your browser's defaults
- Run
hledger import foo-checking.csv.rules
to import any new transactions
After import, you can: discard the CSV, or leave it where it is for a
while, or move it into your archives, as you prefer. If you do nothing,
next time your browser will save something like Checking1-2.csv, and
hledger will use that because of the *
wild card and because it is the
most recent.
Valid transactions
After reading a CSV file, hledger post-processes and validates the generated journal entries as it would for a journal file - balancing them, applying balance assignments, and canonicalising amount styles. Any errors at this stage will be reported in the usual way, displaying the problem entry.
There is one exception: balance assertions, if you have generated them, will not be checked, since normally these will work only when the CSV data is part of the main journal. If you do need to check balance assertions generated from CSV right away, pipe into another hledger:
$ hledger -f file.csv print | hledger -f- print
Deduplicating, importing
When you download a CSV file periodically, eg to get your latest bank transactions, the new file may overlap with the old one, containing some of the same records.
The import command will (a) detect the new transactions, and
(b) append just those transactions to your main journal. It is
idempotent, so you don't have to remember how many times you ran it or
with which version of the CSV. (It keeps state in a hidden
.latest.FILE.csv
file.) This is the easiest way to import CSV data.
Eg:
# download the latest CSV files, then run this command.
# Note, no -f flags needed here.
$ hledger import *.csv [--dry]
This method works for most CSV files. (Where records have a stable chronological order, and new records appear only at the new end.)
A number of other tools and workflows, hledger-specific and otherwise, exist for converting, deduplicating, classifying and managing CSV data. See:
- https://hledger.org/cookbook.html#setups-and-workflows
- https://plaintextaccounting.org -> data import/conversion
Setting amounts
Continuing from amount field above, here are more tips on handling various amount-setting situations:
-
If the amount is in a single CSV field:
a. If its sign indicates direction of flow:
Assign it toamountN
, to set the Nth posting's amount. N is usually 1 or 2 but can go up to 99.b. If another field indicates direction of flow:
Use one or more conditional rules to set the appropriate amount sign. Eg:# assume a withdrawal unless Type contains "deposit": amount1 -%Amount if %Type deposit amount1 %Amount
-
If the amount is in one of two CSV fields (eg Debit and Credit):
a. If both fields are unsigned:
Assign the fields toamountN-in
andamountN-out
. This sets posting N's amount to whichever of these has a non-zero value. If it's the -out value, the amount will be negated.b. If either field is signed:
Use a conditional rule to flip the sign when needed. Eg below, the -out value already has a minus sign so we undo hledger's automatic negating by negating once more (but only if the field is non-empty, so that we don't leave a minus sign by itself):fields date, description, amount1-in, amount1-out if %amount1-out [1-9] amount1-out -%amount1-out
c. If both fields can contain a non-zero value (or both can be empty):
The -in/-out rules normally choose the value which is non-zero/non-empty. Some value pairs can be ambiguous, such as1
andnone
. For such cases, use conditional rules to help select the amount. Eg, to handle the above you could select the value containing non-zero digits:fields date, description, in, out if %in [1-9] amount1 %in if %out [1-9] amount1 %out
-
If you want posting 2's amount converted to cost:
Use the unnumberedamount
(oramount-in
andamount-out
) syntax. -
If the CSV has only balance amounts, not transaction amounts:
Assign tobalanceN
, to set a balance assignment on the Nth posting, causing the posting's amount to be calculated automatically.balance
with no number is equivalent tobalance1
. In this situation hledger is more likely to guess the wrong default account name, so you may need to set that explicitly.
Amount signs
There is some special handling making it easier to parse and to reverse
amount signs. (This only works for whole amounts, not for cost amounts
such as COST in amount1 AMT @ COST
):
-
If an amount value begins with a plus sign:
that will be removed:+AMT
becomesAMT
-
If an amount value is parenthesised:
it will be de-parenthesised and sign-flipped:(AMT)
becomes-AMT
-
If an amount value has two minus signs (or two sets of parentheses, or a minus sign and parentheses):
they cancel out and will be removed:--AMT
or-(AMT)
becomesAMT
-
If an amount value contains just a sign (or just a set of parentheses):
that is removed, making it an empty value."+"
or"-"
or"()"
becomes""
.
It's not possible (without preprocessing the CSV) to set an amount to its absolute value, ie discard its sign.
Setting currency/commodity
If the currency/commodity symbol is included in the CSV's amount field(s):
2023-01-01,foo,$123.00
you don't have to do anything special for the commodity symbol, it will be assigned as part of the amount. Eg:
fields date,description,amount
2023-01-01 foo
expenses:unknown $123.00
income:unknown $-123.00
If the currency is provided as a separate CSV field:
2023-01-01,foo,USD,123.00
You can assign that to the currency
pseudo-field, which has the
special effect of prepending itself to every amount in the transaction
(on the left, with no separating space):
fields date,description,currency,amount
2023-01-01 foo
expenses:unknown USD123.00
income:unknown USD-123.00
Or, you can use a field assignment to construct the amount yourself, with more control. Eg to put the symbol on the right, and separated by a space:
fields date,description,cur,amt
amount %amt %cur
2023-01-01 foo
expenses:unknown 123.00 USD
income:unknown -123.00 USD
Note we used a temporary field name (cur
) that is not currency
-
that would trigger the prepending effect, which we don't want here.
Amount decimal places
Like amounts in a journal file, the amounts generated by CSV rules like
amount1
influence commodity display
styles, such as the number of decimal places
displayed in reports.
The original amounts as written in the CSV file do not affect display style (because we don't yet reliably know their commodity).
Referencing other fields
In field assignments, you can interpolate only CSV fields, not hledger fields. In the example below, there's both a CSV field and a hledger field named amount1, but %amount1 always means the CSV field, not the hledger field:
# Name the third CSV field "amount1"
fields date,description,amount1
# Set hledger's amount1 to the CSV amount1 field followed by USD
amount1 %amount1 USD
# Set comment to the CSV amount1 (not the amount1 assigned above)
comment %amount1
Here, since there's no CSV amount1 field, %amount1 will produce a literal "amount1":
fields date,description,csvamount
amount1 %csvamount USD
# Can't interpolate amount1 here
comment %amount1
When there are multiple field assignments to the same hledger field, only the last one takes effect. Here, comment's value will be be B, or C if "something" is matched, but never A:
comment A
comment B
if something
comment C
How CSV rules are evaluated
Here's how to think of CSV rules being evaluated (if you really need to). First,
include
- all includes are inlined, from top to bottom, depth first. (At each include point the file is inlined and scanned for further includes, recursively, before proceeding.)
Then "global" rules are evaluated, top to bottom. If a rule is repeated, the last one wins:
skip
(at top level)date-format
newest-first
fields
- names the CSV fields, optionally sets up initial assignments to hledger fields
Then for each CSV record in turn:
- test all
if
blocks. If any of them contain aend
rule, skip all remaining CSV records. Otherwise if any of them contain askip
rule, skip that many CSV records. If there are multiple matchedskip
rules, the first one wins. - collect all field assignments at top level and in matched
if
blocks. When there are multiple assignments for a field, keep only the last one. - compute a value for each hledger field - either the one that was assigned to it (and interpolate the %CSVFIELD references), or a default
- generate a hledger transaction (journal entry) from these values.
This is all part of the CSV reader, one of several readers hledger can use to parse input files. When all files have been read successfully, the transactions are passed as input to whichever hledger command the user specified.
Well factored rules
Some things than can help reduce duplication and complexity in rules files:
-
Extracting common rules usable with multiple CSV files into a
common.rules
, and addinginclude common.rules
to each CSV's rules file. -
Splitting if blocks into smaller if blocks, extracting the frequently used parts.
CSV rules examples
Bank of Ireland
Here's a CSV with two amount fields (Debit and Credit), and a balance field, which we can use to add balance assertions, which is not necessary but provides extra error checking:
Date,Details,Debit,Credit,Balance
07/12/2012,LODGMENT 529898,,10.0,131.21
07/12/2012,PAYMENT,5,,126
# bankofireland-checking.csv.rules
# skip the header line
skip
# name the csv fields, and assign some of them as journal entry fields
fields date, description, amount-out, amount-in, balance
# We generate balance assertions by assigning to "balance"
# above, but you may sometimes need to remove these because:
#
# - the CSV balance differs from the true balance,
# by up to 0.0000000000005 in my experience
#
# - it is sometimes calculated based on non-chronological ordering,
# eg when multiple transactions clear on the same day
# date is in UK/Ireland format
date-format %d/%m/%Y
# set the currency
currency EUR
# set the base account for all txns
account1 assets:bank:boi:checking
$ hledger -f bankofireland-checking.csv print
2012-12-07 LODGMENT 529898
assets:bank:boi:checking EUR10.0 = EUR131.2
income:unknown EUR-10.0
2012-12-07 PAYMENT
assets:bank:boi:checking EUR-5.0 = EUR126.0
expenses:unknown EUR5.0
The balance assertions don't raise an error above, because we're reading directly from CSV, but they will be checked if these entries are imported into a journal file.
Coinbase
A simple example with some CSV from Coinbase. The spot price is recorded
using cost notation. The legacy amount
field name conveniently sets
amount 2 (posting 2's amount) to the total cost.
# Timestamp,Transaction Type,Asset,Quantity Transacted,Spot Price Currency,Spot Price at Transaction,Subtotal,Total (inclusive of fees and/or spread),Fees and/or Spread,Notes
# 2021-12-30T06:57:59Z,Receive,USDC,100,GBP,0.740000,"","","","Received 100.00 USDC from an external account"
# coinbase.csv.rules
skip 1
fields Timestamp,Transaction_Type,Asset,Quantity_Transacted,Spot_Price_Currency,Spot_Price_at_Transaction,Subtotal,Total,Fees_Spread,Notes
date %Timestamp
date-format %Y-%m-%dT%T%Z
description %Notes
account1 assets:coinbase:cc
amount %Quantity_Transacted %Asset @ %Spot_Price_at_Transaction %Spot_Price_Currency
$ hledger print -f coinbase.csv
2021-12-30 Received 100.00 USDC from an external account
assets:coinbase:cc 100 USDC @ 0.740000 GBP
income:unknown -74.000000 GBP
Amazon
Here we convert amazon.com order history, and use an if block to generate a third posting if there's a fee. (In practice you'd probably get this data from your bank instead, but it's an example.)
"Date","Type","To/From","Name","Status","Amount","Fees","Transaction ID"
"Jul 29, 2012","Payment","To","Foo.","Completed","$20.00","$0.00","16000000000000DGLNJPI1P9B8DKPVHL"
"Jul 30, 2012","Payment","To","Adapteva, Inc.","Completed","$25.00","$1.00","17LA58JSKRD4HDGLNJPI1P9B8DKPVHL"
# amazon-orders.csv.rules
# skip one header line
skip 1
# name the csv fields, and assign the transaction's date, amount and code.
# Avoided the "status" and "amount" hledger field names to prevent confusion.
fields date, _, toorfrom, name, amzstatus, amzamount, fees, code
# how to parse the date
date-format %b %-d, %Y
# combine two fields to make the description
description %toorfrom %name
# save the status as a tag
comment status:%amzstatus
# set the base account for all transactions
account1 assets:amazon
# leave amount1 blank so it can balance the other(s).
# I'm assuming amzamount excludes the fees, don't remember
# set a generic account2
account2 expenses:misc
amount2 %amzamount
# and maybe refine it further:
#include categorisation.rules
# add a third posting for fees, but only if they are non-zero.
if %fees [1-9]
account3 expenses:fees
amount3 %fees
$ hledger -f amazon-orders.csv print
2012-07-29 (16000000000000DGLNJPI1P9B8DKPVHL) To Foo. ; status:Completed
assets:amazon
expenses:misc $20.00
2012-07-30 (17LA58JSKRD4HDGLNJPI1P9B8DKPVHL) To Adapteva, Inc. ; status:Completed
assets:amazon
expenses:misc $25.00
expenses:fees $1.00
Paypal
Here's a real-world rules file for (customised) Paypal CSV, with some Paypal-specific rules, and a second rules file included:
"Date","Time","TimeZone","Name","Type","Status","Currency","Gross","Fee","Net","From Email Address","To Email Address","Transaction ID","Item Title","Item ID","Reference Txn ID","Receipt ID","Balance","Note"
"10/01/2019","03:46:20","PDT","Calm Radio","Subscription Payment","Completed","USD","-6.99","0.00","-6.99","[email protected]","[email protected]","60P57143A8206782E","MONTHLY - $1 for the first 2 Months: Me - Order 99309. Item total: $1.00 USD first 2 months, then $6.99 / Month","","I-R8YLY094FJYR","","-6.99",""
"10/01/2019","03:46:20","PDT","","Bank Deposit to PP Account ","Pending","USD","6.99","0.00","6.99","","[email protected]","0TU1544T080463733","","","60P57143A8206782E","","0.00",""
"10/01/2019","08:57:01","PDT","Patreon","PreApproved Payment Bill User Payment","Completed","USD","-7.00","0.00","-7.00","[email protected]","[email protected]","2722394R5F586712G","Patreon* Membership","","B-0PG93074E7M86381M","","-7.00",""
"10/01/2019","08:57:01","PDT","","Bank Deposit to PP Account ","Pending","USD","7.00","0.00","7.00","","[email protected]","71854087RG994194F","Patreon* Membership","","2722394R5F586712G","","0.00",""
"10/19/2019","03:02:12","PDT","Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.","Subscription Payment","Completed","USD","-2.00","0.00","-2.00","[email protected]","[email protected]","K9U43044RY432050M","Monthly donation to the Wikimedia Foundation","","I-R5C3YUS3285L","","-2.00",""
"10/19/2019","03:02:12","PDT","","Bank Deposit to PP Account ","Pending","USD","2.00","0.00","2.00","","[email protected]","3XJ107139A851061F","","","K9U43044RY432050M","","0.00",""
"10/22/2019","05:07:06","PDT","Noble Benefactor","Subscription Payment","Completed","USD","10.00","-0.59","9.41","[email protected]","[email protected]","6L8L1662YP1334033","Joyful Systems","","I-KC9VBGY2GWDB","","9.41",""
# paypal-custom.csv.rules
# Tips:
# Export from Activity -> Statements -> Custom -> Activity download
# Suggested transaction type: "Balance affecting"
# Paypal's default fields in 2018 were:
# "Date","Time","TimeZone","Name","Type","Status","Currency","Gross","Fee","Net","From Email Address","To Email Address","Transaction ID","Shipping Address","Address Status","Item Title","Item ID","Shipping and Handling Amount","Insurance Amount","Sales Tax","Option 1 Name","Option 1 Value","Option 2 Name","Option 2 Value","Reference Txn ID","Invoice Number","Custom Number","Quantity","Receipt ID","Balance","Address Line 1","Address Line 2/District/Neighborhood","Town/City","State/Province/Region/County/Territory/Prefecture/Republic","Zip/Postal Code","Country","Contact Phone Number","Subject","Note","Country Code","Balance Impact"
# This rules file assumes the following more detailed fields, configured in "Customize report fields":
# "Date","Time","TimeZone","Name","Type","Status","Currency","Gross","Fee","Net","From Email Address","To Email Address","Transaction ID","Item Title","Item ID","Reference Txn ID","Receipt ID","Balance","Note"
fields date, time, timezone, description_, type, status_, currency, grossamount, feeamount, netamount, fromemail, toemail, code, itemtitle, itemid, referencetxnid, receiptid, balance, note
skip 1
date-format %-m/%-d/%Y
# ignore some paypal events
if
In Progress
Temporary Hold
Update to
skip
# add more fields to the description
description %description_ %itemtitle
# save some other fields as tags
comment itemid:%itemid, fromemail:%fromemail, toemail:%toemail, time:%time, type:%type, status:%status_
# convert to short currency symbols
if %currency USD
currency $
if %currency EUR
currency E
if %currency GBP
currency P
# generate postings
# the first posting will be the money leaving/entering my paypal account
# (negative means leaving my account, in all amount fields)
account1 assets:online:paypal
amount1 %netamount
# the second posting will be money sent to/received from other party
# (account2 is set below)
amount2 -%grossamount
# if there's a fee, add a third posting for the money taken by paypal.
if %feeamount [1-9]
account3 expenses:banking:paypal
amount3 -%feeamount
comment3 business:
# choose an account for the second posting
# override the default account names:
# if the amount is positive, it's income (a debit)
if %grossamount ^[^-]
account2 income:unknown
# if negative, it's an expense (a credit)
if %grossamount ^-
account2 expenses:unknown
# apply common rules for setting account2 & other tweaks
include common.rules
# apply some overrides specific to this csv
# Transfers from/to bank. These are usually marked Pending,
# which can be disregarded in this case.
if
Bank Account
Bank Deposit to PP Account
description %type for %referencetxnid %itemtitle
account2 assets:bank:wf:pchecking
account1 assets:online:paypal
# Currency conversions
if Currency Conversion
account2 equity:currency conversion
# common.rules
if
darcs
noble benefactor
account2 revenues:foss donations:darcshub
comment2 business:
if
Calm Radio
account2 expenses:online:apps
if
electronic frontier foundation
Patreon
wikimedia
Advent of Code
account2 expenses:dues
if Google
account2 expenses:online:apps
description google | music
$ hledger -f paypal-custom.csv print
2019-10-01 (60P57143A8206782E) Calm Radio MONTHLY - $1 for the first 2 Months: Me - Order 99309. Item total: $1.00 USD first 2 months, then $6.99 / Month ; itemid:, fromemail:[email protected], toemail:[email protected], time:03:46:20, type:Subscription Payment, status:Completed
assets:online:paypal $-6.99 = $-6.99
expenses:online:apps $6.99
2019-10-01 (0TU1544T080463733) Bank Deposit to PP Account for 60P57143A8206782E ; itemid:, fromemail:, toemail:[email protected], time:03:46:20, type:Bank Deposit to PP Account, status:Pending
assets:online:paypal $6.99 = $0.00
assets:bank:wf:pchecking $-6.99
2019-10-01 (2722394R5F586712G) Patreon Patreon* Membership ; itemid:, fromemail:[email protected], toemail:[email protected], time:08:57:01, type:PreApproved Payment Bill User Payment, status:Completed
assets:online:paypal $-7.00 = $-7.00
expenses:dues $7.00
2019-10-01 (71854087RG994194F) Bank Deposit to PP Account for 2722394R5F586712G Patreon* Membership ; itemid:, fromemail:, toemail:[email protected], time:08:57:01, type:Bank Deposit to PP Account, status:Pending
assets:online:paypal $7.00 = $0.00
assets:bank:wf:pchecking $-7.00
2019-10-19 (K9U43044RY432050M) Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. Monthly donation to the Wikimedia Foundation ; itemid:, fromemail:[email protected], toemail:[email protected], time:03:02:12, type:Subscription Payment, status:Completed
assets:online:paypal $-2.00 = $-2.00
expenses:dues $2.00
expenses:banking:paypal ; business:
2019-10-19 (3XJ107139A851061F) Bank Deposit to PP Account for K9U43044RY432050M ; itemid:, fromemail:, toemail:[email protected], time:03:02:12, type:Bank Deposit to PP Account, status:Pending
assets:online:paypal $2.00 = $0.00
assets:bank:wf:pchecking $-2.00
2019-10-22 (6L8L1662YP1334033) Noble Benefactor Joyful Systems ; itemid:, fromemail:[email protected], toemail:[email protected], time:05:07:06, type:Subscription Payment, status:Completed
assets:online:paypal $9.41 = $9.41
revenues:foss donations:darcshub $-10.00 ; business:
expenses:banking:paypal $0.59 ; business:
Timeclock
The time logging format of timeclock.el, as read by hledger.
hledger can read time logs in timeclock format. As with
Ledger, these
are (a subset of)
timeclock.el's format,
containing clock-in and clock-out entries as in the example below. The
date is a simple date. The time format is
HH:MM[:SS][+-ZZZZ]. Seconds and timezone are optional. The timezone,
if present, must be four digits and is ignored (currently the time is
always interpreted as a local time). Lines beginning with #
or ;
or
*
, and blank lines, are ignored.
i 2015/03/30 09:00:00 some account optional description after 2 spaces ; optional comment, tags:
o 2015/03/30 09:20:00
i 2015/03/31 22:21:45 another:account
o 2015/04/01 02:00:34
hledger treats each clock-in/clock-out pair as a transaction posting
some number of hours to an account. Or if the session spans more than
one day, it is split into several transactions, one for each day. For
the above time log, hledger print
generates these journal entries:
$ hledger -f t.timeclock print
2015-03-30 * optional description after 2 spaces ; optional comment, tags:
(some account) 0.33h
2015-03-31 * 22:21-23:59
(another:account) 1.64h
2015-04-01 * 00:00-02:00
(another:account) 2.01h
Here is a sample.timeclock to download and some queries to try:
$ hledger -f sample.timeclock balance # current time balances
$ hledger -f sample.timeclock register -p 2009/3 # sessions in march 2009
$ hledger -f sample.timeclock register -p weekly --depth 1 --empty # time summary by week
To generate time logs, ie to clock in and clock out, you could:
-
use emacs and the built-in timeclock.el, or the extended timeclock-x.el and perhaps the extras in ledgerutils.el
-
at the command line, use these bash aliases:
shell alias ti="echo i `date '+%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S'` \$* >>$TIMELOG" alias to="echo o `date '+%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S'` >>$TIMELOG"
-
or use the old
ti
andto
scripts in the ledger 2.x repository. These rely on a "timeclock" executable which I think is just the ledger 2 executable renamed.
Timedot
timedot
format is hledger's human-friendly time logging format.
Compared to timeclock
format, it is
- convenient for quick, approximate, and retroactive time logging
- readable: you can see at a glance where time was spent.
A timedot file contains a series of day entries, which might look like this:
2023-05-01
hom:errands .... .... ; two hours
fos:hledger:timedot .. ; half an hour
per:admin:finance
hledger reads this as a transaction on this day with three (unbalanced) postings, where each dot represents "0.25". No commodity is assumed, but normally we interpret it as hours, with each dot representing a quarter-hour. It's convenient, though not required, to group the dots in fours for easy reading.
$ hledger -f a.timedot print # .timedot file extension (or timedot: prefix) is required
2023-05-01 *
(hom:errands) 2.00 ; two hours
(fos:hledger:timedot) 0.50 ; half an hour
(per:admin:finance) 0
A transaction begins with a non-indented simple date (Y-M-D, Y/M/D, or Y.M.D). It can optionally be preceded by one or more stars and a space, for Emacs org mode compatibility. It can optionally be followed on the same line by a transaction description, and/or a transaction comment following a semicolon.
After the date line are zero or more time postings, consisting of:
- an account name - any hledger-style account name, optionally hierarchical, optionally indented.
- two or more spaces - a field separator, required if there is an amount (as in journal format).
- an optional timedot amount - dots representing quarter hours, or a number representing hours, optionally with a unit suffix.
- an optional posting comment following a semicolon.
Timedot amounts can be:
-
dots: zero or more period characters (
.
), each representing 0.25. Spaces are ignored and can be used for grouping. Eg:.... ..
-
or a number. Eg:
1.5
-
or a number immediately followed by a unit symbol
s
,m
,h
,d
,w
,mo
, ory
. These are interpreted as seconds, minutes, hours, days weeks, months or years, and converted to hours, assuming:
60s
=1m
,60m
=1h
,24h
=1d
,7d
=1w
,30d
=1mo
,365d
=1y
. Eg90m
is parsed as1.5
.
There is some added flexibility to help with keeping time log data in the same file as your notes, todo lists, etc.:
-
Blank lines and lines beginning with
#
or;
are ignored. -
Before the first date line, lines beginning with
*
are ignored. -
From the first date line onward, one or more
*
's followed by a space at beginning of lines (ie, the headline prefix used by Emacs Org mode) is ignored. This means the time log can be kept under an Org headline, and date lines or time transaction lines can be Org headlines. -
Lines not ending with a double-space and amount are parsed as postings with zero amount. Note hledger's register reports hide these by default (add -E to see them).
More examples:
# on this day, 6h was spent on client work, 1.5h on haskell FOSS work, etc.
2016/2/1
inc:client1 .... .... .... .... .... ....
fos:haskell .... ..
biz:research .
2016/2/2
inc:client1 .... ....
biz:research .
2016/2/3
inc:client1 4
fos:hledger 3
biz:research 1
* Time log
** 2023-01-01
*** adm:time .
*** adm:finance .
* 2023 Work Diary
** Q1
*** 2023-02-29
**** DONE
0700 yoga
**** UNPLANNED
**** BEGUN
hom:chores
cleaning ...
water plants
outdoor - one full watering can
indoor - light watering
**** TODO
adm:planning: trip
*** LATER
Reporting:
$ hledger -f a.timedot print date:2016/2/2
2016-02-02 *
(inc:client1) 2.00
2016-02-02 *
(biz:research) 0.25
$ hledger -f a.timedot bal --daily --tree
Balance changes in 2016-02-01-2016-02-03:
|| 2016-02-01d 2016-02-02d 2016-02-03d
============++========================================
biz || 0.25 0.25 1.00
research || 0.25 0.25 1.00
fos || 1.50 0 3.00
haskell || 1.50 0 0
hledger || 0 0 3.00
inc || 6.00 2.00 4.00
client1 || 6.00 2.00 4.00
------------++----------------------------------------
|| 7.75 2.25 8.00
Using period instead of colon as account name separator:
2016/2/4
fos.hledger.timedot 4
fos.ledger ..
$ hledger -f a.timedot --alias /\\./=: bal --tree
4.50 fos
4.00 hledger:timedot
0.50 ledger
--------------------
4.50
A sample.timedot file.
PART 3: REPORTING CONCEPTS
Time periods
Report start & end date
By default, most hledger reports will show the full span of time represented by the journal. The report start date will be the earliest transaction or posting date, and the report end date will be the latest transaction, posting, or market price date.
Often you will want to see a shorter time span, such as the current
month. You can specify a start and/or end date using
-b/--begin
, -e/--end
,
-p/--period
or a date:
query
(described below). All of these accept the smart date
syntax (below).
Some notes:
- End dates are exclusive, as in Ledger, so you should write the date after the last day you want to see in the report.
- As noted in reporting options: among start/end dates specified with options, the last (i.e. right-most) option takes precedence.
- The effective report start and end dates are the intersection of the
start/end dates from options and that from
date:
queries. That is,date:2019-01 date:2019 -p'2000 to 2030'
yields January 2019, the smallest common time span. - In some cases a report interval will adjust start/end dates to fall on interval boundaries (see below).
Examples:
-b 2016/3/17 | begin on St. Patrick's day 2016 |
-e 12/1 | end at the start of december 1st of the current year (11/30 will be the last date included) |
-b thismonth | all transactions on or after the 1st of the current month |
-p thismonth | all transactions in the current month |
date:2016/3/17.. | the above written as queries instead (.. can also be replaced with - ) |
date:..12/1 | |
date:thismonth.. | |
date:thismonth |
Smart dates
hledger's user interfaces accept a "smart date" syntax for added convenience. Smart dates optionally can be relative to today's date, be written with english words, and have less-significant parts omitted (missing parts are inferred as 1). Some examples:
2004/10/1 , 2004-01-01 , 2004.9.1 | exact date, several separators allowed. Year is 4+ digits, month is 1-12, day is 1-31 |
2004 | start of year |
2004/10 | start of month |
10/1 | month and day in current year |
21 | day in current month |
october, oct | start of month in current year |
yesterday, today, tomorrow | -1, 0, 1 days from today |
last/this/next day/week/month/quarter/year | -1, 0, 1 periods from the current period |
in n days/weeks/months/quarters/years | n periods from the current period |
n days/weeks/months/quarters/years ahead | n periods from the current period |
n days/weeks/months/quarters/years ago | -n periods from the current period |
20181201 | 8 digit YYYYMMDD with valid year month and day |
201812 | 6 digit YYYYMM with valid year and month |
Some counterexamples - malformed digit sequences might give surprising results:
201813 | 6 digits with an invalid month is parsed as start of 6-digit year |
20181301 | 8 digits with an invalid month is parsed as start of 8-digit year |
20181232 | 8 digits with an invalid day gives an error |
201801012 | 9+ digits beginning with a valid YYYYMMDD gives an error |
"Today's date" can be overridden with the --today
option, in case
it's needed for testing or for recreating old reports. (Except for
periodic transaction rules, which are not affected by --today
.)
Report intervals
A report interval can be specified so that reports like register, balance or activity become multi-period, showing each subperiod as a separate row or column.
The following standard intervals can be enabled with command-line flags:
-D/--daily
-W/--weekly
-M/--monthly
-Q/--quarterly
-Y/--yearly
More complex intervals can be specified using -p/--period
, described
below.
Date adjustment
When there is a report interval (other than daily), report start/end dates which have been inferred, eg from the journal, are automatically adjusted to natural period boundaries. This is convenient for producing simple periodic reports. More precisely:
-
an inferred start date will be adjusted earlier if needed to fall on a natural period boundary
-
an inferred end date will be adjusted later if needed to make the last period the same length as the others.
By contrast, start/end dates which have been specified explicitly, with
-b
, -e
, -p
or date:
, will not be adjusted (since hledger 1.29).
This makes it possible to specify non-standard report periods, but it
also means that if you are specifying a start date, you should pick one
that's on a period boundary if you want to see simple report period
headings.
Period expressions
The -p/--period
option specifies a period expression, which is a
compact way of expressing a start date, end date, and/or report
interval.
Here's a period expression with a start and end date (specifying the first quarter of 2009):
-p "from 2009/1/1 to 2009/4/1" |
Several keywords like "from" and "to" are supported for readability; these are optional. "to" can also be written as ".." or "-". The spaces are also optional, as long as you don't run two dates together. So the following are equivalent to the above:
-p "2009/1/1 2009/4/1" |
-p2009/1/1to2009/4/1 |
-p2009/1/1..2009/4/1 |
Dates are smart dates, so if the current year is 2009, these are also equivalent to the above:
-p "1/1 4/1" |
-p "jan-apr" |
-p "this year to 4/1" |
If you specify only one date, the missing start or end date will be the earliest or latest transaction date in the journal:
-p "from 2009/1/1" | everything after january 1, 2009 |
-p "since 2009/1" | the same, since is a synonym |
-p "from 2009" | the same |
-p "to 2009" | everything before january 1, 2009 |
You can also specify a period by writing a single partial or full date:
-p "2009" | the year 2009; equivalent to "2009/1/1 to 2010/1/1" |
-p "2009/1" | the month of january 2009; equivalent to "2009/1/1 to 2009/2/1" |
-p "2009/1/1" | the first day of 2009; equivalent to "2009/1/1 to 2009/1/2" |
or by using the "Q" quarter-year syntax (case insensitive):
-p "2009Q1" | first quarter of 2009, equivalent to "2009/1/1 to 2009/4/1" |
-p "q4" | fourth quarter of the current year |
Period expressions with a report interval
A period expression can also begin with a report
interval, separated from the start/end dates (if
any) by a space or the word in
:
-p "weekly from 2009/1/1 to 2009/4/1" |
-p "monthly in 2008" |
-p "quarterly" |
More complex report intervals
Some more complex intervals can be specified within period expressions, such as:
biweekly
(every two weeks)fortnightly
bimonthly
(every two months)every day|week|month|quarter|year
every N days|weeks|months|quarters|years
Weekly on a custom day:
every Nth day of week
(th
,nd
,rd
, orst
are all accepted after the number)every WEEKDAYNAME
(full or three-letter english weekday name, case insensitive)
Monthly on a custom day:
every Nth day [of month]
every Nth WEEKDAYNAME [of month]
Yearly on a custom day:
every MM/DD [of year]
(month number and day of month number)every MONTHNAME DDth [of year]
(full or three-letter english month name, case insensitive, and day of month number)every DDth MONTHNAME [of year]
(equivalent to the above)
Examples:
-p "bimonthly from 2008" | |
-p "every 2 weeks" | |
-p "every 5 months from 2009/03" | |
-p "every 2nd day of week" | periods will go from Tue to Tue |
-p "every Tue" | same |
-p "every 15th day" | period boundaries will be on 15th of each month |
-p "every 2nd Monday" | period boundaries will be on second Monday of each month |
-p "every 11/05" | yearly periods with boundaries on 5th of November |
-p "every 5th November" | same |
-p "every Nov 5th" | same |
Show historical balances at end of the 15th day of each month (N is an end date, exclusive as always):
$ hledger balance -H -p "every 16th day"
Group postings from the start of wednesday to end of the following tuesday (N is both (inclusive) start date and (exclusive) end date):
$ hledger register checking -p "every 3rd day of week"
Multiple weekday intervals
This special form is also supported:
every WEEKDAYNAME,WEEKDAYNAME,...
(full or three-letter english weekday names, case insensitive)
Also, weekday
and weekendday
are shorthand for mon,tue,wed,thu,fri
and sat,sun
.
This is mainly intended for use with --forecast
, to generate periodic
transactions on arbitrary days of the week. It
may be less useful with -p
, since it divides each week into subperiods
of unequal length, which is unusual. (Related:
#1632)
Examples:
-p "every mon,wed,fri" | dates will be Mon, Wed, Fri; periods will be Mon-Tue, Wed-Thu, Fri-Sun |
-p "every weekday" | dates will be Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri; periods will be Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri-Sun |
-p "every weekendday" | dates will be Sat, Sun; periods will be Sat, Sun-Fri |
Depth
With the --depth NUM
option (short form: -NUM
), reports will show
accounts only to the specified depth, hiding deeper subaccounts. Use
this when you want a summary with less detail. This flag has the same
effect as a depth:
query argument: depth:2
, --depth=2
or -2
are
equivalent.
Queries
One of hledger's strengths is being able to quickly report on a precise subset of your data. Most hledger commands accept optional query arguments to restrict their scope. The syntax is as follows:
-
Zero or more space-separated query terms. These are most often account name substrings:
utilities food:groceries
-
Terms with spaces or other special characters should be enclosed in quotes:
"personal care"
-
Regular expressions are also supported:
"^expenses\b" "accounts (payable|receivable)"
-
Add a query type prefix to match other parts of the data:
date:202312- desc:amazon cur:USD amt:">100" status:
-
Add a
not:
prefix to negate a term:not:cur:USD
Query types
Here are the types of query term available. Remember these can also be
prefixed with not:
to convert them into a negative match.
acct:REGEX
, REGEX
Match account names containing this (case insensitive) regular
expression. This is the default query type when
there is no prefix, and regular expression syntax is typically not
needed, so usually we just write an account name substring, like
expenses
or food
.
amt:N, amt:<N, amt:<=N, amt:>N, amt:>=N
Match postings with a single-commodity amount equal to, less than, or
greater than N. (Postings with multi-commodity amounts are not tested
and will always match.) The comparison has two modes: if N is preceded
by a + or - sign (or is 0), the two signed numbers are compared.
Otherwise, the absolute magnitudes are compared, ignoring sign.
code:REGEX
Match by transaction code (eg check number).
cur:REGEX
Match postings or transactions including any amounts whose
currency/commodity symbol is fully matched by REGEX. (For a partial
match, use .*REGEX.*
). Note, to match special
characters which are regex-significant, you need
to escape them with \
. And for characters which are significant to
your shell you may need one more level of escaping. So eg to match the
dollar sign:
hledger print cur:\\$
.
desc:REGEX
Match transaction descriptions.
date:PERIODEXPR
Match dates (or with the --date2
flag, secondary
dates) within the specified period. PERIODEXPR is a
period expression with no report interval.
Examples:
date:2016
, date:thismonth
, date:2/1-2/15
,
date:2021-07-27..nextquarter
.
date2:PERIODEXPR
Match secondary dates within the specified period (independent of the
--date2
flag).
depth:N
Match (or display, depending on command) accounts at or above this
depth.
note:REGEX
Match transaction notes (the part of the description
right of |
, or the whole description if there's no |
).
payee:REGEX
Match transaction payee/payer names (the part of the
description left of |
, or the whole description if there's no |
).
real:, real:0
Match real or virtual postings respectively.
status:, status:!, status:*
Match unmarked, pending, or cleared transactions respectively.
type:TYPECODES
Match by account type (see Declaring accounts > Account
types). TYPECODES
is one or more of the single-letter
account type codes ALERXCV
, case insensitive. Note type:A
and
type:E
will also match their respective subtypes C
(Cash) and V
(Conversion). Certain kinds of account alias can disrupt account types,
see Rewriting accounts > Aliases and account
types.
tag:REGEX[=REGEX]
Match by tag name, and optionally also by tag value. (To match only by
value, use tag:.=REGEX
.)
When querying by tag, note that:
- Accounts also inherit the tags of their parent accounts
- Postings also inherit the tags of their account and their transaction
- Transactions also acquire the tags of their postings.
(inacct:ACCTNAME
A special query term used automatically in hledger-web only: tells
hledger-web to show the transaction register for an account.)
Combining query terms
When given multiple space-separated query terms, most commands select things which match:
- any of the description terms AND
- any of the account terms AND
- any of the status terms AND
- all the other terms.
The print command is a little different, showing transactions which:
- match any of the description terms AND
- have any postings matching any of the positive account terms AND
- have no postings matching any of the negative account terms AND
- match all the other terms.
We also support more complex boolean queries with the 'expr:' prefix. This allows one to combine queries using one of three operators: AND, OR, and NOT, where NOT is different syntax for 'not:'.
Examples of such queries are:
-
Match transactions with 'cool' in the description AND with the 'A' tag
expr:"desc:cool AND tag:A"
-
Match transactions NOT to the 'expenses:food' account OR with the 'A' tag
expr:"NOT expenses:food OR tag:A"
-
Match transactions NOT involving the 'expenses:food' account OR with the 'A' tag AND involving the 'expenses:drink' account. (the AND is implicitly added by space-separation, following the rules above)
expr:"expenses:food OR (tag:A expenses:drink)"
Queries and command options
Some queries can also be expressed as command-line options: depth:2
is
equivalent to --depth 2
, date:2023
is equivalent to -p 2023
, etc.
When you mix command options and query arguments, generally the
resulting query is their intersection.
Queries and valuation
When amounts are converted to other commodities in
cost or value reports, cur:
and
amt:
match the old commodity symbol and the old amount quantity, not
the new ones (except in hledger 1.22.0 where it's reversed, see
#1625).
Querying with account aliases
When account names are rewritten with --alias
or
alias
, note that acct:
will match either the old or the new account
name.
Querying with cost or value
When amounts are converted to other commodities in
cost or value reports, note that cur:
matches the new commodity symbol, and not the old one, and amt:
matches the new quantity, and not the old one. Note: this changed in
hledger 1.22, previously it was the reverse, see the discussion at
#1625.
Pivoting
Normally, hledger groups and sums amounts within each account. The
--pivot FIELD
option substitutes some other transaction field for
account names, causing amounts to be grouped and summed by that field's
value instead. FIELD can be any of the transaction fields status
,
code
, description
, payee
, note
, or a tag name. When pivoting on
a tag and a posting has multiple values of that tag, only the first
value is displayed. Values containing colon:separated:parts
will be
displayed hierarchically, like account names.
Some examples:
2016/02/16 Yearly Dues Payment
assets:bank account 2 EUR
income:dues -2 EUR ; member: John Doe
Normal balance report showing account names:
$ hledger balance
2 EUR assets:bank account
-2 EUR income:dues
--------------------
0
Pivoted balance report, using member: tag values instead:
$ hledger balance --pivot member
2 EUR
-2 EUR John Doe
--------------------
0
One way to show only amounts with a member: value (using a query):
$ hledger balance --pivot member tag:member=.
-2 EUR John Doe
--------------------
-2 EUR
Another way (the acct: query matches against the pivoted "account name"):
$ hledger balance --pivot member acct:.
-2 EUR John Doe
--------------------
-2 EUR
Generating data
hledger has several features for generating data, such as:
-
Periodic transaction rules can generate single or repeating transactions following a template. These are usually dated in the future, eg to help with forecasting. They are activated by the
--forecast
option. -
The balance command's
--budget
option uses these same periodic rules to generate goals for the budget report. -
Auto posting rules can generate extra postings on certain matched transactions. They are always applied to forecast transactions; with the
--auto
flag they are applied to transactions recorded in the journal as well. -
The
--infer-equity
flag infers missing conversion equity postings from @/@@ costs. And the inverse--infer-costs
flag infers missing @/@@ costs from conversion equity postings.
Generated data of this kind is temporary, existing only at report time.
But you can see it in the output of hledger print
, and you can save
that to your journal, in effect converting it from temporary generated
data to permanent recorded data. This could be useful as a data entry
aid.
If you are wondering what data is being generated and why, add the
--verbose-tags
flag. In hledger print
output you will see extra tags
like generated-transaction
, generated-posting
, and modified
on
generated/modified data. Also, even without --verbose-tags
, generated
data always has equivalen hidden tags (with an underscore prefix), so eg
you could match generated transactions with
tag:_generated-transaction
.
Forecasting
Forecasting, or speculative future reporting, can be useful for estimating future balances, or for exploring different future scenarios.
The simplest and most flexible way to do it with hledger is to manually
record a bunch of future-dated transactions. You could keep these in a
separate future.journal
and include that with -f
only when you want
to see them.
--forecast
There is another way: with the --forecast
option, hledger can generate
temporary "forecast transactions" for reporting purposes, according to
periodic transaction rules defined in the
journal. Each rule can generate multiple recurring transactions, so by
changing one rule you can change many forecasted transactions. (These
same rules can also generate budget goals, described in
Budgeting.)
Forecast transactions usually start after ordinary transactions end. By default, they begin after your latest-dated ordinary transaction, or today, whichever is later, and they end six months from today. (The exact rules are a little more complicated, and are given below.)
This is the "forecast period", which need not be the same as the
report period. You can override it - eg to forecast
farther into the future, or to force forecast transactions to overlap
your ordinary transactions - by giving the --forecast option a period
expression argument, like --forecast=..2099
or
--forecast=2023-02-15..
. Note that the =
is required.
Inspecting forecast transactions
print
is the best command for inspecting and troubleshooting forecast
transactions. Eg:
~ monthly from 2022-12-20 rent
assets:bank:checking
expenses:rent $1000
$ hledger print --forecast --today=2023/4/21
2023-05-20 rent
; generated-transaction: ~ monthly from 2022-12-20
assets:bank:checking
expenses:rent $1000
2023-06-20 rent
; generated-transaction: ~ monthly from 2022-12-20
assets:bank:checking
expenses:rent $1000
2023-07-20 rent
; generated-transaction: ~ monthly from 2022-12-20
assets:bank:checking
expenses:rent $1000
2023-08-20 rent
; generated-transaction: ~ monthly from 2022-12-20
assets:bank:checking
expenses:rent $1000
2023-09-20 rent
; generated-transaction: ~ monthly from 2022-12-20
assets:bank:checking
expenses:rent $1000
Here there are no ordinary transactions, so the forecasted transactions
begin on the first occurence after today's date. (You won't normally
use --today
; it's just to make these examples reproducible.)
Forecast reports
Forecast transactions affect all reports, as you would expect. Eg:
$ hledger areg rent --forecast --today=2023/4/21
Transactions in expenses:rent and subaccounts:
2023-05-20 rent as:ba:checking $1000 $1000
2023-06-20 rent as:ba:checking $1000 $2000
2023-07-20 rent as:ba:checking $1000 $3000
2023-08-20 rent as:ba:checking $1000 $4000
2023-09-20 rent as:ba:checking $1000 $5000
$ hledger bal -M expenses --forecast --today=2023/4/21
Balance changes in 2023-05-01..2023-09-30:
|| May Jun Jul Aug Sep
===============++===================================
expenses:rent || $1000 $1000 $1000 $1000 $1000
---------------++-----------------------------------
|| $1000 $1000 $1000 $1000 $1000
Forecast tags
Forecast transactions generated by --forecast have a hidden tag,
_generated-transaction
. So if you ever need to match forecast
transactions, you could use tag:_generated-transaction
(or just
tag:generated
) in a query.
For troubleshooting, you can add the --verbose-tags
flag. Then,
visible generated-transaction
tags will be added also, so you can view
them with the print
command. Their value indicates which periodic rule
was responsible.
Forecast period, in detail
Forecast start/end dates are chosen so as to do something useful by default in almost all situations, while also being flexible. Here are (with luck) the exact rules, to help with troubleshooting:
The forecast period starts on:
- the later of
- the start date in the periodic transaction rule
- the start date in
--forecast
's argument
- otherwise (if those are not available): the later of
- the report start date specified with
-b
/-p
/date:
- the day after the latest ordinary transaction in the journal
- the report start date specified with
- otherwise (if none of these are available): today.
The forecast period ends on:
- the earlier of
- the end date in the periodic transaction rule
- the end date in
--forecast
's argument
- otherwise: the report end date specified with
-e
/-p
/date:
- otherwise: 180 days (~6 months) from today.
Forecast troubleshooting
When --forecast is not doing what you expect, one of these tips should help:
- Remember to use the
--forecast
option. - Remember to have at least one periodic transaction rule in your journal.
- Test with
print --forecast
. - Check for typos or too-restrictive start/end dates in your periodic transaction rule.
- Leave at least 2 spaces between the rule's period expression and description fields.
- Check for future-dated ordinary transactions suppressing forecasted transactions.
- Try setting explicit report start and/or end dates with
-b
,-e
,-p
ordate:
- Try adding the
-E
flag to encourage display of empty periods/zero transactions. - Try setting explicit forecast start and/or end dates with
--forecast=START..END
- Consult Forecast period, in detail, above.
- Check inside the engine: add
--debug=2
(eg).
Budgeting
With the balance command's --budget
report, each
periodic transaction rule generates recurring budget goals in specified
accounts, and goals and actual performance can be compared. See the
balance command's doc below.
You can generate budget goals and forecast transactions at the same
time, from the same or different periodic transaction rules:
hledger bal -M --budget --forecast ...
See also: Budgeting and Forecasting.
Cost reporting
This section is about recording the cost of things, in transactions where one commodity is exchanged for another. Eg an exchange of currency, or a stock purchase or sale. First, a quick glossary:
-
Conversion - an exchange of one currency or commodity for another. Eg a foreign currency exchange, or a purchase or sale of stock or cryptocurrency.
-
Conversion transaction - a transaction involving one or more conversions.
-
Conversion rate - the cost per unit of one commodity in the other, ie the exchange rate.
-
Cost - how much of one commodity was paid to acquire the other. And more generally, in hledger docs: the amount exchanged in the "secondary" commodity (usually your base currency), whether in a purchase or a sale, and whether expressed per unit or in total. Also, the "@/@@ PRICE" notation used to represent this.
-B: Convert to cost
As discussed in JOURNAL > Costs, when recording a transaction
you can also record the amount's cost in another commodity, by adding
@ UNITPRICE
or @@ TOTALPRICE
.
Then you can see a report with amounts converted to cost, by adding the
-B/--cost
flag. (Mnemonic: "B" from "cost
Basis", as in Ledger). Eg:
2022-01-01
assets:dollars $-135 ; 135 dollars is exchanged for..
assets:euros €100 @ $1.35 ; one hundred euros purchased at $1.35 each
$ hledger bal -N
$-135 assets:dollars
€100 assets:euros
$ hledger bal -N -B
$-135 assets:dollars
$135 assets:euros # <- the euros' cost
Notes:
-B is sensitive to the order of postings when a cost is inferred: the inferred price will be in the commodity of the last amount. So if example 3's postings are reversed, while the transaction is equivalent, -B shows something different:
2022-01-01
assets:dollars $-135 ; 135 dollars sold
assets:euros €100 ; for 100 euros
$ hledger bal -N -B
€-100 assets:dollars # <- the dollars' selling price
€100 assets:euros
The @/@@ cost notation is convenient, but has some drawbacks: it does not truly balance the transaction, so it disrupts the accounting equation and tends to causes a non-zero total in balance reports.
Equity conversion postings
By contrast, conventional double entry bookkeeping (DEB) uses a different notation: an extra pair of equity postings to balance conversion transactions. In this style, the above entry might be written:
2022-01-01 one hundred euros purchased at $1.35 each
assets:dollars $-135
equity:conversion $135
equity:conversion €-100
assets:euros €100
This style is more correct, but it's also more verbose and makes cost reporting more difficult for PTA tools.
Happily, current hledger can read either notation, or convert one to the other when needed, so you can use the one you prefer.
You can even use cost notation and equivalent conversion postings at the same time, for clarity. hledger will ignore the redundancy. But be sure the cost and conversion posting amounts match, or you'll see a not-so-clear transaction balancing error message.
Inferring equity postings from cost
With --infer-equity
, hledger detects transactions written with PTA
cost notation and adds equity conversion postings to them:
2022-01-01
assets:dollars -$135
assets:euros €100 @ $1.35
$ hledger print --infer-equity
2022-01-01
assets:dollars $-135
assets:euros €100 @ $1.35
equity:conversion:$-€:€ €-100 ; generated-posting:
equity:conversion:$-€:$ $135.00 ; generated-posting:
The conversion account names can be changed with the conversion account type declaration.
--infer-equity is useful when when transactions have been recorded using cost notation, to help preserve the accounting equation and balance reports' zero total, or to produce more conventional journal entries for sharing with non-PTA-users.
Inferring cost from equity postings
The reverse operation is possible using --infer-costs
, which detects
transactions written with equity conversion postings and adds cost
notation to them:
2022-01-01
assets:dollars $-135
equity:conversion $135
equity:conversion €-100
assets:euros €100
$ hledger print --infer-costs
2022-01-01
assets:dollars $-135 @@ €100
equity:conversion $135
equity:conversion €-100
assets:euros €100
--infer-costs is useful when combined with -B/--cost, allowing cost reporting even when transactions have been recorded using equity postings:
$ hledger print --infer-costs -B
2009-01-01
assets:dollars €-100
assets:euros €100
Notes:
For --infer-costs
to work, an exchange must consist of four postings:
- two non-equity postings
- two equity postings, next to one another
- the equity accounts must be declared, with account type
V
/Conversion
(or if they are not declared, they must be namedequity:conversion
,equity:trade
,equity:trading
or subaccounts of these) - the equity postings' amounts must exactly match the non-equity postings' amounts.
Multiple such exchanges can coexist within a single transaction.
When inferring cost, the order of postings matters: the cost is added to the first of the non-equity postings involved in the exchange, in the commodity of the last non-equity posting involved in the exchange. If you don't want to write your postings in the required order, you can use explicit cost notation instead.
--infer-equity and --infer-costs can be used together, if you have a mixture of both notations in your journal.
When to infer cost/equity
Inferring equity postings or costs is still fairly new, so not enabled by default. We're not sure yet if that should change. Here are two suggestions to try, experience reports welcome:
-
When you use -B, always use --infer-costs as well. Eg:
hledger bal -B --infer-costs
-
Always run hledger with both flags enabled. Eg:
alias hl="hledger --infer-equity --infer-costs"
How to record conversions
Essentially there are four ways to record a conversion transaction in hledger. Here are all of them, with pros and cons.
Conversion with implicit cost
Let's assume 100 EUR is converted to 120 USD. You can just record the outflow (100 EUR) and inflow (120 USD) in the appropriate asset account:
2021-01-01
assets:cash -100 EUR
assets:cash 120 USD
hledger will assume this transaction is balanced, inferring that the
conversion rate must be 1 EUR = 1.20 USD. You can see the inferred rate
by using hledger print -x
.
Pro:
- Concise, easy
Con:
- Less error checking - typos in amounts or commodity symbols may not be detected
- Conversion rate is not clear
- Disturbs the accounting equation, unless you add the --infer-equity flag
You can prevent accidental implicit conversions due to a mistyped
commodity symbol, by using hledger check commodities
.
You can prevent implicit conversions entirely, by using
hledger check balancednoautoconversion
, or -s/--strict
.
Conversion with explicit cost
You can add the conversion rate using @ notation:
2021-01-01
assets:cash -100 EUR @ 1.20 USD
assets:cash 120 USD
Now hledger will check that 100 * 1.20 = 120, and would report an error otherwise.
Pro:
- Still concise
- Makes the conversion rate clear
- Provides more error checking
Con:
- Disturbs the accounting equation, unless you add the --infer-equity flag
Conversion with equity postings
In strict double entry bookkeeping, the above transaction is not
balanced in EUR or in USD, since some EUR disappears, and some USD
appears. This violates the accounting equation (A+L+E=0), and prevents
reports like balancesheetequity
from showing a zero total.
The proper way to make it balance is to add a balancing posting for each commodity, using an equity account:
2021-01-01
assets:cash -100 EUR
equity:conversion 100 EUR
equity:conversion -120 USD
assets:cash 120 USD
Pro:
- Preserves the accounting equation
- Keeps track of conversions and related gains/losses in one place
- Standard, works in any double entry accounting system
Con:
- More verbose
- Conversion rate is not obvious
- Cost reporting requires adding the --infer-costs flag
Conversion with equity postings and explicit cost
Here both equity postings and @ notation are used together.
2021-01-01
assets:cash -100 EUR @ 1.20 USD
equity:conversion 100 EUR
equity:conversion -120 USD
assets:cash 120 USD
Pro:
- Preserves the accounting equation
- Keeps track of conversions and related gains/losses in one place
- Makes the conversion rate clear
- Provides more error checking
Con:
- Most verbose
- Not compatible with ledger
Cost tips
- Recording the cost/conversion rate explicitly is good because it makes that clear and helps detect errors.
- Recording equity postings is good because it is correct bookkeeping and preserves the accounting equation.
- Combining these is possible.
- When you want to see the cost (or sale proceeds) of things, use
-B
(short form of--cost
). - If you use conversion postings without cost notation, add
--infer-costs
also. - If you use cost notation without conversion postings, and you want
to see a balanced balance sheet or print correct journal entries,
use
--infer-equity
. - Conversion to cost is performed before valuation (described next).
Valuation
Instead of reporting amounts in their original commodity, hledger can
convert them to cost/sale amount (using the conversion rate recorded in
the transaction), and/or to market value (using some market price on a
certain date). This is controlled by the --value=TYPE[,COMMODITY]
option, which will be described below. We also provide the simpler -V
and -X COMMODITY
options, and often one of these is all you need:
-V: Value
The -V/--market
flag converts amounts to market value in their default
valuation commodity, using the market prices in effect
on the valuation date(s), if any. More on these in a minute.
-X: Value in specified commodity
The -X/--exchange=COMM
option is like -V
, except you tell it which
currency you want to convert to, and it tries to convert everything to
that.
Valuation date
Since market prices can change from day to day, market value reports have a valuation date (or more than one), which determines which market prices will be used.
For single period reports, if an explicit report end date is specified, that will be used as the valuation date; otherwise the valuation date is the journal's end date.
For multiperiod reports, each column/period is valued on the last day of the period, by default.
Finding market price
To convert a commodity A to its market value in another commodity B, hledger looks for a suitable market price (exchange rate) as follows, in this order of preference :
-
A declared market price or inferred market price: A's latest market price in B on or before the valuation date as declared by a P directive, or (with the
--infer-market-prices
flag) inferred from costs. -
A reverse market price: the inverse of a declared or inferred market price from B to A.
-
A forward chain of market prices: a synthetic price formed by combining the shortest chain of "forward" (only 1 above) market prices, leading from A to B.
-
Any chain of market prices: a chain of any market prices, including both forward and reverse prices (1 and 2 above), leading from A to B.
There is a limit to the length of these price chains; if hledger reaches
that length without finding a complete chain or exhausting all
possibilities, it will give up (with a "gave up" message visible in
--debug=2
output). That limit is currently 1000.
Amounts for which no suitable market price can be found, are not converted.
--infer-market-prices: market prices from transactions
Normally, market value in hledger is fully controlled by, and requires,
P directives in your journal. Since adding and updating
those can be a chore, and since transactions usually take place at close
to market value, why not use the recorded costs as additional
market prices (as Ledger does) ? Adding the --infer-market-prices
flag
to -V
, -X
or --value
enables this.
So for example, hledger bs -V --infer-market-prices
will get market
prices both from P directives and from transactions. If both occur on
the same day, the P directive takes precedence.
There is a downside: value reports can sometimes be affected in
confusing/undesired ways by your journal entries. If this happens to
you, read all of this Valuation section carefully, and try
adding --debug
or --debug=2
to troubleshoot.
--infer-market-prices
can infer market prices from:
-
multicommodity transactions with explicit prices (
@
/@@
) -
multicommodity transactions with implicit prices (no
@
, two commodities, unbalanced). (With these, the order of postings matters.hledger print -x
can be useful for troubleshooting.) -
multicommodity transactions with equity postings, if cost is inferred with
--infer-costs
.
There is a limitation (bug) currently: when a valuation commodity is not
specified, prices inferred with --infer-market-prices
do not help
select a default valuation commodity, as P
prices would. So conversion
might not happen because no valuation commodity was detected
(--debug=2
will show this). To be safe, specify the valuation
commmodity, eg:
-X EUR --infer-market-prices
, not-V --infer-market-prices
--value=then,EUR --infer-market-prices
, not--value=then --infer-market-prices
Signed costs and market prices can be confusing. For reference, here is the current behaviour, since hledger 1.25. (If you think it should work differently, see #1870.)
2022-01-01 Positive Unit prices
a A 1
b B -1 @ A 1
2022-01-01 Positive Total prices
a A 1
b B -1 @@ A 1
2022-01-02 Negative unit prices
a A 1
b B 1 @ A -1
2022-01-02 Negative total prices
a A 1
b B 1 @@ A -1
2022-01-03 Double Negative unit prices
a A -1
b B -1 @ A -1
2022-01-03 Double Negative total prices
a A -1
b B -1 @@ A -1
All of the transactions above are considered balanced (and on each day, the two transactions are considered equivalent). Here are the market prices inferred for B:
$ hledger -f- --infer-market-prices prices
P 2022-01-01 B A 1
P 2022-01-01 B A 1.0
P 2022-01-02 B A -1
P 2022-01-02 B A -1.0
P 2022-01-03 B A -1
P 2022-01-03 B A -1.0
Valuation commodity
When you specify a valuation commodity (-X COMM
or
--value TYPE,COMM
):
hledger will convert all amounts to COMM, wherever it can find a
suitable market price (including by reversing or chaining prices).
When you leave the valuation commodity unspecified (-V
or
--value TYPE
):
For each commodity A, hledger picks a default valuation commodity as
follows, in this order of preference:
-
The price commodity from the latest P-declared market price for A on or before valuation date.
-
The price commodity from the latest P-declared market price for A on any date. (Allows conversion to proceed when there are inferred prices before the valuation date.)
-
If there are no P directives at all (any commodity or date) and the
--infer-market-prices
flag is used: the price commodity from the latest transaction-inferred price for A on or before valuation date.
This means:
-
If you have P directives, they determine which commodities
-V
will convert, and to what. -
If you have no P directives, and use the
--infer-market-prices
flag, costs determine it.
Amounts for which no valuation commodity can be found are not converted.
Simple valuation examples
Here are some quick examples of -V
:
; one euro is worth this many dollars from nov 1
P 2016/11/01 € $1.10
; purchase some euros on nov 3
2016/11/3
assets:euros €100
assets:checking
; the euro is worth fewer dollars by dec 21
P 2016/12/21 € $1.03
How many euros do I have ?
$ hledger -f t.j bal -N euros
€100 assets:euros
What are they worth at end of nov 3 ?
$ hledger -f t.j bal -N euros -V -e 2016/11/4
$110.00 assets:euros
What are they worth after 2016/12/21 ? (no report end date specified, defaults to today)
$ hledger -f t.j bal -N euros -V
$103.00 assets:euros
--value: Flexible valuation
-V
and -X
are special cases of the more general --value
option:
--value=TYPE[,COMM] TYPE is then, end, now or YYYY-MM-DD.
COMM is an optional commodity symbol.
Shows amounts converted to:
- default valuation commodity (or COMM) using market prices at posting dates
- default valuation commodity (or COMM) using market prices at period end(s)
- default valuation commodity (or COMM) using current market prices
- default valuation commodity (or COMM) using market prices at some date
The TYPE part selects cost or value and valuation date:
--value=then
: Convert amounts to their value in the default valuation
commodity, using market prices on each
posting's date.
--value=end
: Convert amounts to their value in the default valuation commodity,
using market prices on the last day of the report period (or if
unspecified, the journal's end date); or in multiperiod reports,
market prices on the last day of each subperiod.
--value=now
: Convert amounts to their value in the default valuation commodity
using current market prices (as of when report is generated).
--value=YYYY-MM-DD
: Convert amounts to their value in the default valuation commodity
using market prices on this date.
To select a different valuation commodity, add the optional ,COMM
part: a comma, then the target commodity's symbol. Eg:
--value=now,EUR
. hledger will do its best to convert amounts to
this commodity, deducing market prices as described
above.
More valuation examples
Here are some examples showing the effect of --value
, as seen with
print
:
P 2000-01-01 A 1 B
P 2000-02-01 A 2 B
P 2000-03-01 A 3 B
P 2000-04-01 A 4 B
2000-01-01
(a) 1 A @ 5 B
2000-02-01
(a) 1 A @ 6 B
2000-03-01
(a) 1 A @ 7 B
Show the cost of each posting:
$ hledger -f- print --cost
2000-01-01
(a) 5 B
2000-02-01
(a) 6 B
2000-03-01
(a) 7 B
Show the value as of the last day of the report period (2000-02-29):
$ hledger -f- print --value=end date:2000/01-2000/03
2000-01-01
(a) 2 B
2000-02-01
(a) 2 B
With no report period specified, that shows the value as of the last day of the journal (2000-03-01):
$ hledger -f- print --value=end
2000-01-01
(a) 3 B
2000-02-01
(a) 3 B
2000-03-01
(a) 3 B
Show the current value (the 2000-04-01 price is still in effect today):
$ hledger -f- print --value=now
2000-01-01
(a) 4 B
2000-02-01
(a) 4 B
2000-03-01
(a) 4 B
Show the value on 2000/01/15:
$ hledger -f- print --value=2000-01-15
2000-01-01
(a) 1 B
2000-02-01
(a) 1 B
2000-03-01
(a) 1 B
You may need to explicitly set a commodity's display style, when reverse prices are used. Eg this output might be surprising:
P 2000-01-01 A 2B
2000-01-01
a 1B
b
$ hledger print -x -X A
2000-01-01
a 0
b 0
Explanation: because there's no amount or commodity directive specifying a display style for A, 0.5A gets the default style, which shows no decimal digits. Because the displayed amount looks like zero, the commodity symbol and minus sign are not displayed either. Adding a commodity directive sets a more useful display style for A:
P 2000-01-01 A 2B
commodity 0.00A
2000-01-01
a 1B
b
$ hledger print -X A
2000-01-01
a 0.50A
b -0.50A
Interaction of valuation and queries
When matching postings based on queries in the presence of valuation, the following happens.
- The query is separated into two parts:
- the currency (
cur:
) or amount (amt:
). - all other parts.
- the currency (
- The postings are matched to the currency and amount queries based on pre-valued amounts.
- Valuation is applied to the postings.
- The postings are matched to the other parts of the query based on post-valued amounts.
See: 1625
Effect of valuation on reports
Here is a reference for how valuation is supposed to affect each part of hledger's reports (and a glossary). (It's wide, you'll have to scroll sideways.) It may be useful when troubleshooting. If you find problems, please report them, ideally with a reproducible example. Related: #329, #1083.
Report type | -B , --cost | -V , -X | --value=then | --value=end | --value=DATE , --value=now |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
posting amounts | cost | value at report end or today | value at posting date | value at report or journal end | value at DATE/today |
balance assertions/assignments | unchanged | unchanged | unchanged | unchanged | unchanged |
register | |||||
starting balance (-H) | cost | value at report or journal end | valued at day each historical posting was made | value at report or journal end | value at DATE/today |
starting balance (-H) with report interval | cost | value at day before report or journal start | valued at day each historical posting was made | value at day before report or journal start | value at DATE/today |
posting amounts | cost | value at report or journal end | value at posting date | value at report or journal end | value at DATE/today |
summary posting amounts with report interval | summarised cost | value at period ends | sum of postings in interval, valued at interval start | value at period ends | value at DATE/today |
running total/average | sum/average of displayed values | sum/average of displayed values | sum/average of displayed values | sum/average of displayed values | sum/average of displayed values |
balance (bs, bse, cf, is) | |||||
balance changes | sums of costs | value at report end or today of sums of postings | value at posting date | value at report or journal end of sums of postings | value at DATE/today of sums of postings |
budget amounts (--budget) | like balance changes | like balance changes | like balance changes | like balances | like balance changes |
grand total | sum of displayed values | sum of displayed values | sum of displayed valued | sum of displayed values | sum of displayed values |
balance (bs, bse, cf, is) with report interval | |||||
starting balances (-H) | sums of costs of postings before report start | value at report start of sums of all postings before report start | sums of values of postings before report start at respective posting dates | value at report start of sums of all postings before report start | sums of postings before report start |
balance changes (bal, is, bs --change, cf --change) | sums of costs of postings in period | same as --value=end | sums of values of postings in period at respective posting dates | balance change in each period, valued at period ends | value at DATE/today of sums of postings |
end balances (bal -H, is --H, bs, cf) | sums of costs of postings from before report start to period end | same as --value=end | sums of values of postings from before period start to period end at respective posting dates | period end balances, valued at period ends | value at DATE/today of sums of postings |
budget amounts (--budget) | like balance changes/end balances | like balance changes/end balances | like balance changes/end balances | like balances | like balance changes/end balances |
row totals, row averages (-T, -A) | sums, averages of displayed values | sums, averages of displayed values | sums, averages of displayed values | sums, averages of displayed values | sums, averages of displayed values |
column totals | sums of displayed values | sums of displayed values | sums of displayed values | sums of displayed values | sums of displayed values |
grand total, grand average | sum, average of column totals | sum, average of column totals | sum, average of column totals | sum, average of column totals | sum, average of column totals |
--cumulative
is omitted to save space, it works like -H
but with a
zero starting balance.
Glossary:
cost : calculated using price(s) recorded in the transaction(s).
value : market value using available market price declarations, or the unchanged amount if no conversion rate can be found.
report start : the first day of the report period specified with -b or -p or date:, otherwise today.
report or journal start : the first day of the report period specified with -b or -p or date:, otherwise the earliest transaction date in the journal, otherwise today.
report end : the last day of the report period specified with -e or -p or date:, otherwise today.
report or journal end : the last day of the report period specified with -e or -p or date:, otherwise the latest transaction date in the journal, otherwise today.
report interval : a flag (-D/-W/-M/-Q/-Y) or period expression that activates the report's multi-period mode (whether showing one or many subperiods).
PART 4: COMMANDS
Commands overview
Here are the built-in commands:
DATA ENTRY
These data entry commands are the only ones which can modify your journal file.
- add - add transactions using terminal prompts
- import - add new transactions from other files, eg CSV files
DATA CREATION
- close - generate balance-zeroing/restoring transactions
- rewrite - generate auto postings, like print --auto
DATA MANAGEMENT
- check - check for various kinds of error in the data
- diff - compare account transactions in two journal files
REPORTS, FINANCIAL
- aregister (areg) - show transactions in a particular account
- balancesheet (bs) - show assets, liabilities and net worth
- balancesheetequity (bse) - show assets, liabilities and equity
- cashflow (cf) - show changes in liquid assets
- incomestatement (is) - show revenues and expenses
REPORTS, VERSATILE
- balance (bal) - show balance changes, end balances, budgets, gains..
- print - show transactions or export journal data
- register (reg) - show postings in one or more accounts & running total
- roi - show return on investments
REPORTS, BASIC
- accounts - show account names
- activity - show bar charts of posting counts per period
- codes - show transaction codes
- commodities - show commodity/currency symbols
- descriptions - show transaction descriptions
- files - show input file paths
- notes - show note parts of transaction descriptions
- payees - show payee parts of transaction descriptions
- prices - show market prices
- stats - show journal statistics
- tags - show tag names
- test - run self tests
HELP
ADD-ONS
And here are some typical add-on commands. Some of these are installed by the hledger-install script. If installed, they will appear in hledger's commands list:
- ui - run hledger's terminal UI
- web - run hledger's web UI
- iadd - add transactions using a TUI (currently hard to build)
- interest - generate interest transactions
- stockquotes - download market prices from AlphaVantage
- Scripts and add-ons - check-fancyassertions, edit, fifo, git, move, pijul, plot, and more..
Next, each command is described in detail, in alphabetical order.
accounts
Show account names.
This command lists account names. By default it shows all known accounts, either used in transactions or declared with account directives.
With query arguments, only matched account names and account names referenced by matched postings are shown.
Or it can show just the used accounts (--used
/-u
), the declared
accounts (--declared
/-d
), the accounts declared but not used
(--unused
), the accounts used but not declared (--undeclared
), or
the first account matched by an account name pattern, if any (--find
).
It shows a flat list by default. With --tree
, it uses indentation to
show the account hierarchy. In flat mode you can add --drop N
to omit
the first few account name components. Account names can be
depth-clipped with depth:N
or --depth N
or -N
.
With --types
, it also shows each account's type, if it's known. (See
Declaring accounts > Account types.)
With --positions
, it also shows the file and line number of each
account's declaration, if any, and the account's overall declaration
order; these may be useful when troubleshooting account display order.
With --directives
, it adds the account
keyword, showing valid
account directives which can be pasted into a journal file. This is
useful together with --undeclared
when updating your account
declarations to satisfy hledger check accounts
.
The --find
flag can be used to look up a single account name, in the
same way that the aregister
command does. It returns the
alphanumerically-first matched account name, or if none can be found, it
fails with a non-zero exit code.
Examples:
$ hledger accounts
assets:bank:checking
assets:bank:saving
assets:cash
expenses:food
expenses:supplies
income:gifts
income:salary
liabilities:debts
$ hledger accounts --undeclared --directives >> $LEDGER_FILE
$ hledger check accounts
activity
Show an ascii barchart of posting counts per interval.
The activity command displays an ascii histogram showing transaction counts by day, week, month or other reporting interval (by day is the default). With query arguments, it counts only matched transactions.
Examples:
$ hledger activity --quarterly
2008-01-01 **
2008-04-01 *******
2008-07-01
2008-10-01 **
add
Prompt for transactions and add them to the journal. Any arguments will be used as default inputs for the first N prompts.
Many hledger users edit their journals directly with a text editor, or
generate them from CSV. For more interactive data entry, there is the
add
command, which prompts interactively on the console for new
transactions, and appends them to the main journal file (which should be
in journal format). Existing transactions are not changed. This is one
of the few hledger commands that writes to the journal file (see also
import
).
To use it, just run hledger add
and follow the prompts. You can add as
many transactions as you like; when you are finished, enter .
or press
control-d or control-c to exit.
Features:
- add tries to provide useful defaults, using the most similar (by description) recent transaction (filtered by the query, if any) as a template.
- You can also set the initial defaults with command line arguments.
- Readline-style edit keys can be used during data entry.
- The tab key will auto-complete whenever possible - accounts,
payees/descriptions, dates (
yesterday
,today
,tomorrow
). If the input area is empty, it will insert the default value. - If the journal defines a default commodity, it will be added to any bare numbers entered.
- A parenthesised transaction code may be entered following a date.
- Comments and tags may be entered following a description or amount.
- If you make a mistake, enter
<
at any prompt to go one step backward. - Input prompts are displayed in a different colour when the terminal supports it.
Example (see https://hledger.org/add.html for a detailed tutorial):
$ hledger add
Adding transactions to journal file /src/hledger/examples/sample.journal
Any command line arguments will be used as defaults.
Use tab key to complete, readline keys to edit, enter to accept defaults.
An optional (CODE) may follow transaction dates.
An optional ; COMMENT may follow descriptions or amounts.
If you make a mistake, enter < at any prompt to go one step backward.
To end a transaction, enter . when prompted.
To quit, enter . at a date prompt or press control-d or control-c.
Date [2015/05/22]:
Description: supermarket
Account 1: expenses:food
Amount 1: $10
Account 2: assets:checking
Amount 2 [$-10.0]:
Account 3 (or . or enter to finish this transaction): .
2015/05/22 supermarket
expenses:food $10
assets:checking $-10.0
Save this transaction to the journal ? [y]:
Saved.
Starting the next transaction (. or ctrl-D/ctrl-C to quit)
Date [2015/05/22]: <CTRL-D> $
On Microsoft Windows, the add command makes sure that no part of the file path ends with a period, as that would cause problems (#1056).
aregister
(areg)
Show the transactions and running historical balance of a single account, with each transaction displayed as one line.
aregister
shows the overall transactions affecting a particular
account (and any subaccounts). Each report line represents one
transaction in this account. Transactions before the report start date
are always included in the running balance (--historical
mode is
always on).
This is a more "real world", bank-like view than the
register
command (which shows individual postings,
possibly from multiple accounts, not necessarily in historical mode). As
a quick rule of thumb: - use aregister
for reviewing and reconciling
real-world asset/liability accounts - use register
for reviewing
detailed revenues/expenses.
aregister
requires one argument: the account to report on. You can
write either the full account name, or a case-insensitive regular
expression which will select the alphabetically first matched account.
When there are multiple matches, the alphabetically-first choice can be
surprising; eg if you have assets:per:checking 1
and
assets:biz:checking 2
accounts, hledger areg checking
would select
assets:biz:checking 2
. It's just a convenience to save typing, so if
in doubt, write the full account name, or a distinctive substring that
matches uniquely.
Transactions involving subaccounts of this account will also be shown.
aregister
ignores depth limits, so its final total will always match a
balance report with similar arguments.
Any additional arguments form a query which will filter the transactions shown. Note some queries will disturb the running balance, causing it to be different from the account's real-world running balance.
An example: this shows the transactions and historical running balance during july, in the first account whose name contains "checking":
$ hledger areg checking date:jul
Each aregister
line item shows:
- the transaction's date (or the relevant posting's date if different, see below)
- the names of all the other account(s) involved in this transaction (probably abbreviated)
- the total change to this account's balance from this transaction
- the account's historical running balance after this transaction.
Transactions making a net change of zero are not shown by default; add
the -E/--empty
flag to show them.
For performance reasons, column widths are chosen based on the first
1000 lines; this means unusually wide values in later lines can cause
visual discontinuities as column widths are adjusted. If you want to
ensure perfect alignment, at the cost of more time and memory, use the
--align-all
flag.
This command also supports the output
destination and output
format options. The output formats
supported are txt
, csv
, and json
.
aregister and custom posting dates
Transactions whose date is outside the report period can still be shown,
if they have a posting to this account dated inside the report period.
(And in this case it's the posting date that is shown.) This ensures
that aregister
can show an accurate historical running balance,
matching the one shown by register -H
with the same arguments.
To filter strictly by transaction date instead, add the --txn-dates
flag. If you use this flag and some of your postings have custom dates,
it's probably best to assume the running balance is wrong.
balance
(bal)
Show accounts and their balances.
balance
is one of hledger's oldest and most versatile commands, for
listing account balances, balance changes, values, value changes and
more, during one time period or many. Generally it shows a table, with
rows representing accounts, and columns representing periods.
Note there are some higher-level variants of the balance
command with
convenient defaults, which can be simpler to use:
balancesheet
,
balancesheetequity
, cashflow
and
incomestatement
. When you need more control, then
use balance
.
balance features
Here's a quick overview of the balance
command's features, followed
by more detailed descriptions and examples. Many of these work with the
higher-level commands as well.
balance
can show..
- accounts as a list (
-l
) or a tree (-t
) - optionally depth-limited (
-[1-9]
) - sorted by declaration order and name, or by amount
..and their..
- balance changes (the default)
- or actual and planned balance changes (
--budget
) - or value of balance changes (
-V
) - or change of balance values
(
--valuechange
) - or unrealised capital gain/loss (
--gain
) - or postings count (
--count
)
..in..
- one time period (the whole journal period by default)
- or multiple periods (
-D
,-W
,-M
,-Q
,-Y
,-p INTERVAL
)
..either..
- per period (the default)
- or accumulated since report start date
(
--cumulative
) - or accumulated since account creation
(
--historical/-H
)
..possibly converted to..
- cost (
--value=cost[,COMM]
/--cost
/-B
) - or market value, as of transaction dates
(
--value=then[,COMM]
) - or at period ends (
--value=end[,COMM]
) - or now (
--value=now
) - or at some other date (
--value=YYYY-MM-DD
)
..with..
- totals (
-T
), averages (-A
), percentages (-%
), inverted sign (--invert
) - rows and columns swapped
(
--transpose
) - another field used as account name
(
--pivot
) - custom-formatted line items (single-period reports only)
(
--format
) - commodities displayed on the same line or multiple lines
(
--layout
)
This command supports the output destination and
output format options, with output formats txt
,
csv
, json
, and (multi-period reports only:) html
. In txt
output
in a colour-supporting terminal, negative amounts are shown in red.
The --related
/-r
flag shows the balance of the other postings in
the transactions of the postings which would normally be shown.
Simple balance report
With no arguments, balance
shows a list of all accounts and their
change of balance - ie, the sum of posting amounts, both inflows and
outflows - during the entire period of the journal. ("Simple" here
means just one column of numbers, covering a single period. You can also
have multi-period reports, described later.)
For real-world accounts, these numbers will normally be their end balance at the end of the journal period; more on this below.
Accounts are sorted by declaration order if any, and then alphabetically by account name. For instance (using examples/sample.journal):
$ hledger -f examples/sample.journal bal
$1 assets:bank:saving
$-2 assets:cash
$1 expenses:food
$1 expenses:supplies
$-1 income:gifts
$-1 income:salary
$1 liabilities:debts
--------------------
0
Accounts with a zero balance (and no non-zero subaccounts, in tree
mode - see below) are hidden by default. Use -E/--empty
to show them
(revealing assets:bank:checking
here):
$ hledger -f examples/sample.journal bal -E
0 assets:bank:checking
$1 assets:bank:saving
$-2 assets:cash
$1 expenses:food
$1 expenses:supplies
$-1 income:gifts
$-1 income:salary
$1 liabilities:debts
--------------------
0
The total of the amounts displayed is shown as the last line, unless
-N
/--no-total
is used.
Balance report line format
For single-period balance reports displayed in the terminal (only), you
can use --format FMT
to customise the format and content of each line.
Eg:
$ hledger -f examples/sample.journal balance --format "%20(account) %12(total)"
assets $-1
bank:saving $1
cash $-2
expenses $2
food $1
supplies $1
income $-2
gifts $-1
salary $-1
liabilities:debts $1
---------------------------------
0
The FMT format string specifies the formatting applied to each account/balance pair. It may contain any suitable text, with data fields interpolated like so:
%[MIN][.MAX](FIELDNAME)
-
MIN pads with spaces to at least this width (optional)
-
MAX truncates at this width (optional)
-
FIELDNAME must be enclosed in parentheses, and can be one of:
depth_spacer
- a number of spaces equal to the account's depth, or if MIN is specified, MIN * depth spaces.account
- the account's nametotal
- the account's balance/posted total, right justified
Also, FMT can begin with an optional prefix to control how multi-commodity amounts are rendered:
%_
- render on multiple lines, bottom-aligned (the default)%^
- render on multiple lines, top-aligned%,
- render on one line, comma-separated
There are some quirks. Eg in one-line mode, %(depth_spacer)
has no
effect, instead %(account)
has indentation built in. Experimentation
may be needed to get pleasing results.
Some example formats:
%(total)
- the account's total%-20.20(account)
- the account's name, left justified, padded to 20 characters and clipped at 20 characters%,%-50(account) %25(total)
- account name padded to 50 characters, total padded to 20 characters, with multiple commodities rendered on one line%20(total) %2(depth_spacer)%-(account)
- the default format for the single-column balance report
Filtered balance report
You can show fewer accounts, a different time period, totals from cleared transactions only, etc. by using query arguments or options to limit the postings being matched. Eg:
$ hledger -f examples/sample.journal bal --cleared assets date:200806
$-2 assets:cash
--------------------
$-2
List or tree mode
By default, or with -l/--flat
, accounts are shown as a flat list with
their full names visible, as in the examples above.
With -t/--tree
, the account hierarchy is shown, with subaccounts'
"leaf" names indented below their parent:
$ hledger -f examples/sample.journal balance
$-1 assets
$1 bank:saving
$-2 cash
$2 expenses
$1 food
$1 supplies
$-2 income
$-1 gifts
$-1 salary
$1 liabilities:debts
--------------------
0
Notes:
-
"Boring" accounts are combined with their subaccount for more compact output, unless
--no-elide
is used. Boring accounts have no balance of their own and just one subaccount (egassets:bank
andliabilities
above). -
All balances shown are "inclusive", ie including the balances from all subaccounts. Note this means some repetition in the output, which requires explanation when sharing reports with non-plaintextaccounting-users. A tree mode report's final total is the sum of the top-level balances shown, not of all the balances shown.
-
Each group of sibling accounts (ie, under a common parent) is sorted separately.
Depth limiting
With a depth:NUM
query, or --depth NUM
option, or just -NUM
(eg:
-3
) balance reports will show accounts only to the specified depth,
hiding the deeper subaccounts. This can be useful for getting an
overview without too much detail.
Account balances at the depth limit always include the balances from any deeper subaccounts (even in list mode). Eg, limiting to depth 1:
$ hledger -f examples/sample.journal balance -1
$-1 assets
$2 expenses
$-2 income
$1 liabilities
--------------------
0
Dropping top-level accounts
You can also hide one or more top-level account name parts, using
--drop NUM
. This can be useful for hiding repetitive top-level account
names:
$ hledger -f examples/sample.journal bal expenses --drop 1
$1 food
$1 supplies
--------------------
$2
Showing declared accounts
With --declared
, accounts which have been declared with an account
directive will be included in the balance report, even if
they have no transactions. (Since they will have a zero balance, you
will also need -E/--empty
to see them.)
More precisely, leaf declared accounts (with no subaccounts) will be included, since those are usually the more useful in reports.
The idea of this is to be able to see a useful "complete" balance report, even when you don't have transactions in all of your declared accounts yet.
Sorting by amount
With -S/--sort-amount
, accounts with the largest (most positive)
balances are shown first. Eg: hledger bal expenses -MAS
shows your
biggest averaged monthly expenses first. When more than one commodity is
present, they will be sorted by the alphabetically earliest commodity
first, and then by subsequent commodities (if an amount is missing a
commodity, it is treated as 0).
Revenues and liability balances are typically negative, however, so -S
shows these in reverse order. To work around this, you can add
--invert
to flip the signs. (Or, use one of the higher-level reports,
which flip the sign automatically. Eg: hledger incomestatement -MAS
).
Percentages
With -%/--percent
, balance reports show each account's value
expressed as a percentage of the (column) total.
Note it is not useful to calculate percentages if the amounts in a column have mixed signs. In this case, make a separate report for each sign, eg:
$ hledger bal -% amt:`>0`
$ hledger bal -% amt:`<0`
Similarly, if the amounts in a column have mixed commodities, convert
them to one commodity with -B
, -V
, -X
or --value
, or make a
separate report for each commodity:
$ hledger bal -% cur:\\$
$ hledger bal -% cur:€
Multi-period balance report
With a report interval (set by the -D/--daily
,
-W/--weekly
, -M/--monthly
, -Q/--quarterly
, -Y/--yearly
, or
-p/--period
flag), balance
shows a tabular report, with columns
representing successive time periods (and a title):
$ hledger -f examples/sample.journal bal --quarterly income expenses -E
Balance changes in 2008:
|| 2008q1 2008q2 2008q3 2008q4
===================++=================================
expenses:food || 0 $1 0 0
expenses:supplies || 0 $1 0 0
income:gifts || 0 $-1 0 0
income:salary || $-1 0 0 0
-------------------++---------------------------------
|| $-1 $1 0 0
Notes:
- The report's start/end dates will be expanded, if necessary, to fully encompass the displayed subperiods (so that the first and last subperiods have the same duration as the others).
- Leading and trailing periods (columns) containing all zeroes are not
shown, unless
-E/--empty
is used. - Accounts (rows) containing all zeroes are not shown, unless
-E/--empty
is used. - Amounts with many commodities are shown in abbreviated form, unless
--no-elide
is used. (experimental) - Average and/or total columns can be added with the
-A/--average
and-T/--row-total
flags. - The
--transpose
flag can be used to exchange rows and columns. - The
--pivot FIELD
option causes a different transaction field to be used as "account name". See PIVOTING.
Multi-period reports with many periods can be too wide for easy viewing in the terminal. Here are some ways to handle that:
- Hide the totals row with
-N/--no-total
- Convert to a single currency with
-V
- Maximize the terminal window
- Reduce the terminal's font size
- View with a pager like less, eg:
hledger bal -D --color=yes | less -RS
- Output as CSV and use a CSV viewer like
visidata
(
hledger bal -D -O csv | vd -f csv
), Emacs' csv-mode (M-x csv-mode, C-c C-a
), or a spreadsheet (hledger bal -D -o a.csv && open a.csv
) - Output as HTML and view with a browser:
hledger bal -D -o a.html && open a.html
Balance change, end balance
It's important to be clear on the meaning of the numbers shown in balance reports. Here is some terminology we use:
A balance change is the net amount added to, or removed from, an account during some period.
An end balance is the amount accumulated in an account as of some date (and some time, but hledger doesn't store that; assume end of day in your timezone). It is the sum of previous balance changes.
We call it a historical end balance if it includes all balance changes since the account was created. For a real world account, this means it will match the "historical record", eg the balances reported in your bank statements or bank web UI. (If they are correct!)
In general, balance changes are what you want to see when reviewing revenues and expenses, and historical end balances are what you want to see when reviewing or reconciling asset, liability and equity accounts.
balance
shows balance changes by default. To see accurate historical
end balances:
-
Initialise account starting balances with an "opening balances" transaction (a transfer from equity to the account), unless the journal covers the account's full lifetime.
-
Include all of of the account's prior postings in the report, by not specifying a report start date, or by using the
-H/--historical
flag. (-H
causes report start date to be ignored when summing postings.)
Balance report types
The balance command is quite flexible; here is the full detail on how to control what it reports. If the following seems complicated, don't worry - this is for advanced reporting, and it does take time and experimentation to get familiar with all the report modes.
There are three important option groups:
hledger balance [CALCULATIONTYPE] [ACCUMULATIONTYPE] [VALUATIONTYPE] ...
Calculation type
The basic calculation to perform for each table cell. It is one of:
--sum
: sum the posting amounts (default)--budget
: sum the amounts, but also show the budget goal amount (for each account/period)--valuechange
: show the change in period-end historical balance values (caused by deposits, withdrawals, and/or market price fluctuations)--gain
: show the unrealised capital gain/loss, (the current valued balance minus each amount's original cost)--count
: show the count of postings
Accumulation type
How amounts should accumulate across report periods. Another way to say it: which time period's postings should contribute to each cell's calculation. It is one of:
-
--change
: calculate with postings from column start to column end, ie "just this column". Typically used to see revenues/expenses. (default for balance, incomestatement) -
--cumulative
: calculate with postings from report start to column end, ie "previous columns plus this column". Typically used to show changes accumulated since the report's start date. Not often used. -
--historical/-H
: calculate with postings from journal start to column end, ie "all postings from before report start date until this column's end". Typically used to see historical end balances of assets/liabilities/equity. (default for balancesheet, balancesheetequity, cashflow)
Valuation type
Which kind of value or cost conversion should be applied, if any, before displaying the report. It is one of:
- no valuation type : don't convert to cost or value (default)
--value=cost[,COMM]
: convert amounts to cost (then optionally to some other commodity)--value=then[,COMM]
: convert amounts to market value on transaction dates--value=end[,COMM]
: convert amounts to market value on period end date(s)
(default with--valuechange
,--gain
)--value=now[,COMM]
: convert amounts to market value on today's date--value=YYYY-MM-DD[,COMM]
: convert amounts to market value on another date
or one of the equivalent simpler flags:
-B/--cost
: like --value=cost (though, note --cost and --value are independent options which can both be used at once)-V/--market
: like --value=end-X COMM/--exchange COMM
: like --value=end,COMM
See Cost reporting and Valuation for more about these.
Combining balance report types
Most combinations of these options should produce reasonable reports, but if you find any that seem wrong or misleading, let us know. The following restrictions are applied:
--valuechange
implies--value=end
--valuechange
makes--change
the default when used with thebalancesheet
/balancesheetequity
commands--cumulative
or--historical
disables--row-total/-T
For reference, here is what the combinations of accumulation and valuation show:
Valuation:> Accumulation:v | no valuation | --value= then | --value= end | --value= YYYY-MM-DD /now |
---|---|---|---|---|
--change | change in period | sum of posting-date market values in period | period-end value of change in period | DATE-value of change in period |
--cumulative | change from report start to period end | sum of posting-date market values from report start to period end | period-end value of change from report start to period end | DATE-value of change from report start to period end |
--historical /-H | change from journal start to period end (historical end balance) | sum of posting-date market values from journal start to period end | period-end value of change from journal start to period end | DATE-value of change from journal start to period end |
Budget report
The --budget
report type activates extra columns showing any budget
goals for each account and period. The budget goals are defined by
periodic transactions. This is
useful for comparing planned and actual income, expenses, time usage,
etc.
For example, you can take average monthly expenses in the common expense categories to construct a minimal monthly budget:
;; Budget
~ monthly
income $2000
expenses:food $400
expenses:bus $50
expenses:movies $30
assets:bank:checking
;; Two months worth of expenses
2017-11-01
income $1950
expenses:food $396
expenses:bus $49
expenses:movies $30
expenses:supplies $20
assets:bank:checking
2017-12-01
income $2100
expenses:food $412
expenses:bus $53
expenses:gifts $100
assets:bank:checking
You can now see a monthly budget report:
$ hledger balance -M --budget
Budget performance in 2017/11/01-2017/12/31:
|| Nov Dec
======================++====================================================
assets || $-2445 [ 99% of $-2480] $-2665 [ 107% of $-2480]
assets:bank || $-2445 [ 99% of $-2480] $-2665 [ 107% of $-2480]
assets:bank:checking || $-2445 [ 99% of $-2480] $-2665 [ 107% of $-2480]
expenses || $495 [ 103% of $480] $565 [ 118% of $480]
expenses:bus || $49 [ 98% of $50] $53 [ 106% of $50]
expenses:food || $396 [ 99% of $400] $412 [ 103% of $400]
expenses:movies || $30 [ 100% of $30] 0 [ 0% of $30]
income || $1950 [ 98% of $2000] $2100 [ 105% of $2000]
----------------------++----------------------------------------------------
|| 0 [ 0] 0 [ 0]
This is different from a normal balance report in several ways. Currently:
- Accounts with budget goals during the report period, and their parents, are shown.
- Their subaccounts are not shown (regardless of the depth setting).
- Accounts without budget goals, if any, are aggregated and shown as "<unbudgeted>".
- Amounts are always inclusive (subaccount-including), even in list mode.
- After each actual amount, the corresponding goal amount and percentage of goal reached are also shown, in square brackets.
This means that the numbers displayed will not always add up! Eg above,
the expenses
actual amount includes the gifts and supplies
transactions, but the expenses:gifts
and expenses:supplies
accounts
are not shown, as they have no budget amounts declared.
This can be confusing. When you need to make things clearer, use the
-E/--empty
flag, which will reveal all accounts including unbudgeted
ones, giving the full picture. Eg:
$ hledger balance -M --budget --empty
Budget performance in 2017/11/01-2017/12/31:
|| Nov Dec
======================++====================================================
assets || $-2445 [ 99% of $-2480] $-2665 [ 107% of $-2480]
assets:bank || $-2445 [ 99% of $-2480] $-2665 [ 107% of $-2480]
assets:bank:checking || $-2445 [ 99% of $-2480] $-2665 [ 107% of $-2480]
expenses || $495 [ 103% of $480] $565 [ 118% of $480]
expenses:bus || $49 [ 98% of $50] $53 [ 106% of $50]
expenses:food || $396 [ 99% of $400] $412 [ 103% of $400]
expenses:gifts || 0 $100
expenses:movies || $30 [ 100% of $30] 0 [ 0% of $30]
expenses:supplies || $20 0
income || $1950 [ 98% of $2000] $2100 [ 105% of $2000]
----------------------++----------------------------------------------------
|| 0 [ 0] 0 [ 0]
You can roll over unspent budgets to next period with --cumulative
:
$ hledger balance -M --budget --cumulative
Budget performance in 2017/11/01-2017/12/31:
|| Nov Dec
======================++====================================================
assets || $-2445 [ 99% of $-2480] $-5110 [ 103% of $-4960]
assets:bank || $-2445 [ 99% of $-2480] $-5110 [ 103% of $-4960]
assets:bank:checking || $-2445 [ 99% of $-2480] $-5110 [ 103% of $-4960]
expenses || $495 [ 103% of $480] $1060 [ 110% of $960]
expenses:bus || $49 [ 98% of $50] $102 [ 102% of $100]
expenses:food || $396 [ 99% of $400] $808 [ 101% of $800]
expenses:movies || $30 [ 100% of $30] $30 [ 50% of $60]
income || $1950 [ 98% of $2000] $4050 [ 101% of $4000]
----------------------++----------------------------------------------------
|| 0 [ 0] 0 [ 0]
It's common to limit budgets/budget reports to just expenses
hledger bal -M --budget expenses
or just revenues and expenses (eg, using account types):
hledger bal -M --budget type:rx
It's also common to limit or convert them to a single currency
(cur:COMM
or -X COMM [--infer-market-prices]
). If showing multiple
currencies, --layout bare
or --layout tall
can help.
For more examples and notes, see Budgeting.
Budget report start date
This might be a bug, but for now: when making budget reports, it's a
good idea to explicitly set the report's start date to the first day of
a reporting period, because a periodic rule like ~ monthly
generates
its transactions on the 1st of each month, and if your journal has no
regular transactions on the 1st, the default report start date could
exclude that budget goal, which can be a little surprising. Eg here the
default report period is just the day of 2020-01-15:
~ monthly in 2020
(expenses:food) $500
2020-01-15
expenses:food $400
assets:checking
$ hledger bal expenses --budget
Budget performance in 2020-01-15:
|| 2020-01-15
==============++============
<unbudgeted> || $400
--------------++------------
|| $400
To avoid this, specify the budget report's period, or at least the
start date, with -b
/-e
/-p
/date:
, to ensure it includes the
budget goal transactions (periodic transactions) that you want. Eg,
adding -b 2020/1/1
to the above:
$ hledger bal expenses --budget -b 2020/1/1
Budget performance in 2020-01-01..2020-01-15:
|| 2020-01-01..2020-01-15
===============++========================
expenses:food || $400 [80% of $500]
---------------++------------------------
|| $400 [80% of $500]
Budgets and subaccounts
You can add budgets to any account in your account hierarchy. If you have budgets on both parent account and some of its children, then budget(s) of the child account(s) would be added to the budget of their parent, much like account balances behave.
In the most simple case this means that once you add a budget to any account, all its parents would have budget as well.
To illustrate this, consider the following budget:
~ monthly from 2019/01
expenses:personal $1,000.00
expenses:personal:electronics $100.00
liabilities
With this, monthly budget for electronics is defined to be $100 and
budget for personal expenses is an additional $1000, which implicitly
means that budget for both expenses:personal
and expenses
is $1100.
Transactions in expenses:personal:electronics
will be counted both
towards its $100 budget and $1100 of expenses:personal
, and
transactions in any other subaccount of expenses:personal
would be
counted towards only towards the budget of expenses:personal
.
For example, let's consider these transactions:
~ monthly from 2019/01
expenses:personal $1,000.00
expenses:personal:electronics $100.00
liabilities
2019/01/01 Google home hub
expenses:personal:electronics $90.00
liabilities $-90.00
2019/01/02 Phone screen protector
expenses:personal:electronics:upgrades $10.00
liabilities
2019/01/02 Weekly train ticket
expenses:personal:train tickets $153.00
liabilities
2019/01/03 Flowers
expenses:personal $30.00
liabilities
As you can see, we have transactions in
expenses:personal:electronics:upgrades
and
expenses:personal:train tickets
, and since both of these accounts are
without explicitly defined budget, these transactions would be counted
towards budgets of expenses:personal:electronics
and
expenses:personal
accordingly:
$ hledger balance --budget -M
Budget performance in 2019/01:
|| Jan
===============================++===============================
expenses || $283.00 [ 26% of $1100.00]
expenses:personal || $283.00 [ 26% of $1100.00]
expenses:personal:electronics || $100.00 [ 100% of $100.00]
liabilities || $-283.00 [ 26% of $-1100.00]
-------------------------------++-------------------------------
|| 0 [ 0]
And with --empty
, we can get a better picture of budget allocation and
consumption:
$ hledger balance --budget -M --empty
Budget performance in 2019/01:
|| Jan
========================================++===============================
expenses || $283.00 [ 26% of $1100.00]
expenses:personal || $283.00 [ 26% of $1100.00]
expenses:personal:electronics || $100.00 [ 100% of $100.00]
expenses:personal:electronics:upgrades || $10.00
expenses:personal:train tickets || $153.00
liabilities || $-283.00 [ 26% of $-1100.00]
----------------------------------------++-------------------------------
|| 0 [ 0]
Selecting budget goals
The budget report evaluates periodic transaction rules to generate
special "goal transactions", which generate the goal amounts for each
account in each report subperiod. When troubleshooting, you can use
print --forecast
to show these as forecasted transactions:
$ hledger print --forecast=BUDGETREPORTPERIOD tag:generated
By default, the budget report uses all available periodic transaction rules to generate goals. This includes rules with a different report interval from your report. Eg if you have daily, weekly and monthly periodic rules, all of these will contribute to the goals in a monthly budget report.
You can select a subset of periodic rules by providing an argument to
the --budget
flag. --budget=DESCPAT
will match all periodic rules
whose description contains DESCPAT, a case-insensitive substring (not a
regular expression or query). This means you can give your periodic
rules descriptions (remember that two spaces are
needed), and
then select from multiple budgets defined in your journal.
Budget vs forecast
hledger --forecast ...
and hledger balance --budget ...
are separate
features, though both of them use the periodic transaction rules defined
in the journal, and both of them generate temporary transactions for
reporting purposes ("forecast transactions" and "budget goal
transactions", respectively). You can use both features at the same
time if you want. Here are some differences between them, as of hledger
1.29:
CLI:
- --forecast is a general hledger option, usable with any command
- --budget is a
balance
command option, usable only with that command.
Visibility of generated transactions:
- forecast transactions are visible in any report, like ordinary transactions
- budget goal transactions are invisible except for the goal amounts they produce in --budget reports.
Periodic transaction rules:
- --forecast uses all available periodic transaction rules
- --budget uses all periodic rules (
--budget
) or a selected subset (--budget=DESCPAT
)
Period of generated transactions:
- --forecast generates forecast transactions
- from after the last regular transaction to the end of the report
period (
--forecast
) - or, during a specified period (
--forecast=PERIODEXPR
) - possibly further restricted by a period specified in the periodic transaction rule
- and always restricted within the bounds of the report period
- from after the last regular transaction to the end of the report
period (
- --budget generates budget goal transactions
- throughout the report period
- possibly restricted by a period specified in the periodic transaction rule.
Data layout
The --layout
option affects how balance reports show multi-commodity
amounts and commodity symbols, which can improve readability. It can
also normalise the data for easy consumption by other programs. It has
four possible values:
--layout=wide[,WIDTH]
: commodities are shown on a single line, optionally elided to WIDTH--layout=tall
: each commodity is shown on a separate line--layout=bare
: commodity symbols are in their own column, amounts are bare numbers--layout=tidy
: data is normalised to easily-consumed "tidy" form, with one row per data value
Here are the --layout
modes supported by each output
format; note only CSV output supports all of them:
- | txt | csv | html | json | sql |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
wide | Y | Y | Y | ||
tall | Y | Y | Y | ||
bare | Y | Y | Y | ||
tidy | Y |
Examples:
-
Wide layout. With many commodities, reports can be very wide:
$ hledger -f examples/bcexample.hledger bal assets:us:etrade -3 -T -Y --layout=wide Balance changes in 2012-01-01..2014-12-31: || 2012 2013 2014 Total ==================++==================================================================================================================================================================================================================== Assets:US:ETrade || 10.00 ITOT, 337.18 USD, 12.00 VEA, 106.00 VHT 70.00 GLD, 18.00 ITOT, -98.12 USD, 10.00 VEA, 18.00 VHT -11.00 ITOT, 4881.44 USD, 14.00 VEA, 170.00 VHT 70.00 GLD, 17.00 ITOT, 5120.50 USD, 36.00 VEA, 294.00 VHT ------------------++-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- || 10.00 ITOT, 337.18 USD, 12.00 VEA, 106.00 VHT 70.00 GLD, 18.00 ITOT, -98.12 USD, 10.00 VEA, 18.00 VHT -11.00 ITOT, 4881.44 USD, 14.00 VEA, 170.00 VHT 70.00 GLD, 17.00 ITOT, 5120.50 USD, 36.00 VEA, 294.00 VHT
-
Limited wide layout. A width limit reduces the width, but some commodities will be hidden:
$ hledger -f examples/bcexample.hledger bal assets:us:etrade -3 -T -Y --layout=wide,32 Balance changes in 2012-01-01..2014-12-31: || 2012 2013 2014 Total ==================++=========================================================================================================================== Assets:US:ETrade || 10.00 ITOT, 337.18 USD, 2 more.. 70.00 GLD, 18.00 ITOT, 3 more.. -11.00 ITOT, 3 more.. 70.00 GLD, 17.00 ITOT, 3 more.. ------------------++--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- || 10.00 ITOT, 337.18 USD, 2 more.. 70.00 GLD, 18.00 ITOT, 3 more.. -11.00 ITOT, 3 more.. 70.00 GLD, 17.00 ITOT, 3 more..
-
Tall layout. Each commodity gets a new line (may be different in each column), and account names are repeated:
$ hledger -f examples/bcexample.hledger bal assets:us:etrade -3 -T -Y --layout=tall Balance changes in 2012-01-01..2014-12-31: || 2012 2013 2014 Total ==================++================================================== Assets:US:ETrade || 10.00 ITOT 70.00 GLD -11.00 ITOT 70.00 GLD Assets:US:ETrade || 337.18 USD 18.00 ITOT 4881.44 USD 17.00 ITOT Assets:US:ETrade || 12.00 VEA -98.12 USD 14.00 VEA 5120.50 USD Assets:US:ETrade || 106.00 VHT 10.00 VEA 170.00 VHT 36.00 VEA Assets:US:ETrade || 18.00 VHT 294.00 VHT ------------------++-------------------------------------------------- || 10.00 ITOT 70.00 GLD -11.00 ITOT 70.00 GLD || 337.18 USD 18.00 ITOT 4881.44 USD 17.00 ITOT || 12.00 VEA -98.12 USD 14.00 VEA 5120.50 USD || 106.00 VHT 10.00 VEA 170.00 VHT 36.00 VEA || 18.00 VHT 294.00 VHT
-
Bare layout. Commodity symbols are kept in one column, each commodity gets its own report row, account names are repeated:
$ hledger -f examples/bcexample.hledger bal assets:us:etrade -3 -T -Y --layout=bare Balance changes in 2012-01-01..2014-12-31: || Commodity 2012 2013 2014 Total ==================++============================================= Assets:US:ETrade || GLD 0 70.00 0 70.00 Assets:US:ETrade || ITOT 10.00 18.00 -11.00 17.00 Assets:US:ETrade || USD 337.18 -98.12 4881.44 5120.50 Assets:US:ETrade || VEA 12.00 10.00 14.00 36.00 Assets:US:ETrade || VHT 106.00 18.00 170.00 294.00 ------------------++--------------------------------------------- || GLD 0 70.00 0 70.00 || ITOT 10.00 18.00 -11.00 17.00 || USD 337.18 -98.12 4881.44 5120.50 || VEA 12.00 10.00 14.00 36.00 || VHT 106.00 18.00 170.00 294.00
-
Bare layout also affects CSV output, which is useful for producing data that is easier to consume, eg for making charts:
$ hledger -f examples/bcexample.hledger bal assets:us:etrade -3 -O csv --layout=bare "account","commodity","balance" "Assets:US:ETrade","GLD","70.00" "Assets:US:ETrade","ITOT","17.00" "Assets:US:ETrade","USD","5120.50" "Assets:US:ETrade","VEA","36.00" "Assets:US:ETrade","VHT","294.00" "total","GLD","70.00" "total","ITOT","17.00" "total","USD","5120.50" "total","VEA","36.00" "total","VHT","294.00"
-
Tidy layout produces normalised "tidy data", where every variable has its own column and each row represents a single data point. See https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/tidyr/vignettes/tidy-data.html for more. This is the easiest kind of data for other software to consume. Here's how it looks:
$ hledger -f examples/bcexample.hledger bal assets:us:etrade -3 -Y -O csv --layout=tidy "account","period","start_date","end_date","commodity","value" "Assets:US:ETrade","2012","2012-01-01","2012-12-31","GLD","0" "Assets:US:ETrade","2012","2012-01-01","2012-12-31","ITOT","10.00" "Assets:US:ETrade","2012","2012-01-01","2012-12-31","USD","337.18" "Assets:US:ETrade","2012","2012-01-01","2012-12-31","VEA","12.00" "Assets:US:ETrade","2012","2012-01-01","2012-12-31","VHT","106.00" "Assets:US:ETrade","2013","2013-01-01","2013-12-31","GLD","70.00" "Assets:US:ETrade","2013","2013-01-01","2013-12-31","ITOT","18.00" "Assets:US:ETrade","2013","2013-01-01","2013-12-31","USD","-98.12" "Assets:US:ETrade","2013","2013-01-01","2013-12-31","VEA","10.00" "Assets:US:ETrade","2013","2013-01-01","2013-12-31","VHT","18.00" "Assets:US:ETrade","2014","2014-01-01","2014-12-31","GLD","0" "Assets:US:ETrade","2014","2014-01-01","2014-12-31","ITOT","-11.00" "Assets:US:ETrade","2014","2014-01-01","2014-12-31","USD","4881.44" "Assets:US:ETrade","2014","2014-01-01","2014-12-31","VEA","14.00" "Assets:US:ETrade","2014","2014-01-01","2014-12-31","VHT","170.00"
Useful balance reports
Some frequently used balance
options/reports are:
-
bal -M revenues expenses
Show revenues/expenses in each month. Also available as theincomestatement
command. -
bal -M -H assets liabilities
Show historical asset/liability balances at each month end. Also available as thebalancesheet
command. -
bal -M -H assets liabilities equity
Show historical asset/liability/equity balances at each month end. Also available as thebalancesheetequity
command. -
bal -M assets not:receivable
Show changes to liquid assets in each month. Also available as thecashflow
command.
Also:
-
bal -M expenses -2 -SA
Show monthly expenses summarised to depth 2 and sorted by average amount. -
bal -M --budget expenses
Show monthly expenses and budget goals. -
bal -M --valuechange investments
Show monthly change in market value of investment assets. -
bal investments --valuechange -D date:lastweek amt:'>1000' -STA [--invert]
Show top gainers [or losers] last week
balancesheet
(bs)
This command displays a balance sheet, showing historical ending balances of asset and liability accounts. (To see equity as well, use the balancesheetequity command.) Amounts are shown with normal positive sign, as in conventional financial statements.
This report shows accounts declared with the Asset
, Cash
or
Liability
type (see account
types). Or if no such
accounts are declared, it shows top-level accounts named asset
or
liability
(case insensitive, plurals allowed) and their subaccounts.
Example:
$ hledger balancesheet
Balance Sheet
Assets:
$-1 assets
$1 bank:saving
$-2 cash
--------------------
$-1
Liabilities:
$1 liabilities:debts
--------------------
$1
Total:
--------------------
0
This command is a higher-level variant of the balance
command, and supports many of that command's features, such as
multi-period reports. It is similar to
hledger balance -H assets liabilities
, but with smarter account
detection, and liabilities displayed with their sign flipped.
This command also supports the output
destination and output
format options The output formats supported
are txt
, csv
, html
, and (experimental) json
.
balancesheetequity
(bse)
This command displays a balance sheet, showing historical ending balances of asset, liability and equity accounts. Amounts are shown with normal positive sign, as in conventional financial statements.
This report shows accounts declared with the Asset
, Cash
,
Liability
or Equity
type (see account
types). Or if no such
accounts are declared, it shows top-level accounts named asset
,
liability
or equity
(case insensitive, plurals allowed) and their
subaccounts.
Example:
$ hledger balancesheetequity
Balance Sheet With Equity
Assets:
$-2 assets
$1 bank:saving
$-3 cash
--------------------
$-2
Liabilities:
$1 liabilities:debts
--------------------
$1
Equity:
$1 equity:owner
--------------------
$1
Total:
--------------------
0
This command is a higher-level variant of the balance
command, and supports many of that command's features, such as
multi-period reports. It is similar to
hledger balance -H assets liabilities equity
, but with smarter account
detection, and liabilities/equity displayed with their sign flipped.
This command also supports the output
destination and output
format options The output formats supported
are txt
, csv
, html
, and (experimental) json
.
cashflow
(cf)
This command displays a cashflow statement, showing the inflows and outflows affecting "cash" (ie, liquid, easily convertible) assets. Amounts are shown with normal positive sign, as in conventional financial statements.
This report shows accounts declared with the Cash
type (see account
types). Or if no such
accounts are declared, it shows accounts
- under a top-level account named
asset
(case insensitive, plural allowed) - whose name contains some variation of
cash
,bank
,checking
orsaving
.
More precisely: all accounts matching this case insensitive regular expression:
^assets?(:.+)?:(cash|bank|che(ck|que?)(ing)?|savings?|currentcash)(:|$)
and their subaccounts.
An example cashflow report:
$ hledger cashflow
Cashflow Statement
Cash flows:
$-1 assets
$1 bank:saving
$-2 cash
--------------------
$-1
Total:
--------------------
$-1
This command is a higher-level variant of the balance
command, and supports many of that command's features, such as
multi-period reports. It is similar to
hledger balance assets not:fixed not:investment not:receivable
, but
with smarter account detection.
This command also supports the output
destination and output
format options The output formats supported
are txt
, csv
, html
, and (experimental) json
.
check
Check for various kinds of errors in your data.
hledger provides a number of built-in error checks to help prevent
problems in your data. Some of these are run automatically; or, you can
use this check
command to run them on demand, with no output and a
zero exit code if all is well. Specify their names (or a prefix) as
argument(s).
Some examples:
hledger check # basic checks
hledger check -s # basic + strict checks
hledger check ordereddates payees # basic + two other checks
If you are an Emacs user, you can also configure flycheck-hledger to run these checks, providing instant feedback as you edit the journal.
Here are the checks currently available:
Basic checks
These checks are always run automatically, by (almost) all hledger
commands, including check
:
-
parseable - data files are well-formed and can be successfully parsed
-
balancedwithautoconversion - all transactions are balanced, inferring missing amounts where necessary, and possibly converting commodities using costs or automatically-inferred costs
-
assertions - all balance assertions in the journal are passing. (This check can be disabled with
-I
/--ignore-assertions
.)
Strict checks
These additional checks are run when the -s
/--strict
(strict
mode) flag is used. Or, they can be run by giving their
names as arguments to check
:
-
accounts - all account names used by transactions have been declared
-
commodities - all commodity symbols used have been declared
-
balancednoautoconversion - transactions are balanced, possibly using explicit costs but not inferred ones
Other checks
These checks can be run only by giving their names as arguments to
check
. They are more specialised and not desirable for everyone,
therefore optional:
-
ordereddates - transactions are ordered by date within each file
-
payees - all payees used by transactions have been declared
-
recentassertions - all accounts with balance assertions have a balance assertion no more than 7 days before their latest posting
-
tags - all tags used by transactions have been declared
-
uniqueleafnames - all account leaf names are unique
Custom checks
A few more checks are are available as separate add-on commands, in https://github.com/simonmichael/hledger/tree/master/bin:
-
hledger-check-tagfiles - all tag values containing / (a forward slash) exist as file paths
-
hledger-check-fancyassertions - more complex balance assertions are passing
You could make similar scripts to perform your own custom checks. See: Cookbook -> Scripting.
More about specific checks
hledger check recentassertions
will complain if any balance-asserted
account does not have a balance assertion within 7 days before its
latest posting. This aims to prevent the situation where you are
regularly updating your journal, but forgetting to check your balances
against the real world, then one day must dig back through months of
data to find an error. It assumes that adding a balance assertion
requires/reminds you to check the real-world balance. That may not be
true if you auto-generate balance assertions from bank data; in that
case, I recommend to import transactions uncleared, then use the
manual-review-and-mark-cleared phase as a reminder to check the latest
assertions against real-world balances.
close
(equity)
Generate transactions which transfer account balances to and/or from another account (typically equity). This can be useful for migrating balances to a new journal file, or for merging earnings into equity at end of accounting period.
By default, it prints a transaction that zeroes out ALE accounts (asset, liability, equity accounts; this requires account types to be configured); or if ACCTQUERY is provided, the accounts matched by that.
(experimental)
This command has four main modes, corresponding to the most common use cases:
-
With
--close
(default), it prints a "closing balances" transaction that zeroes out ALE (asset, liability, equity) accounts by default (this requires account types to be inferred or declared); or, the accounts matched by the provided ACCTQUERY arguments. -
With
--open
, it prints an opposite "opening balances" transaction that restores those balances from zero. This is similar to Ledger's equity command. -
With
--migrate
, it prints both the closing and opening transactions. This is the preferred way to migrate balances to a new file: runhledger close --migrate
, add the closing transaction at the end of the old file, and add the opening transaction at the start of the new file. The matching closing/opening transactions cancel each other out, preserving correct balances during multi-file reporting. -
With
--retain
, it prints a "retain earnings" transaction that transfers RX (revenue and expense) balances toequity:retained earnings
. Businesses traditionally do this at the end of each accounting period; it is less necessary with computer-based accounting, but it could still be useful if you want to see the accounting equation (A=L+E) satisfied.
In all modes, the defaults can be overridden:
- the transaction descriptions can be changed with
--close-desc=DESC
and--open-desc=DESC
- the account to transfer to/from can be changed with
--close-acct=ACCT
and--open-acct=ACCT
- the accounts to be closed/opened can be changed with
ACCTQUERY
(account query arguments). - the closing/opening dates can be changed with
-e DATE
(a report end date)
By default just one destination/source posting will be used, with its
amount left implicit. With --x/--explicit
, the amount will be shown
explicitly, and if it involves multiple commodities, a separate posting
will be generated for each of them (similar to print -x
).
With --show-costs
, any amount costs are shown, with separate postings
for each cost. This is currently the best way to view investment lots.
If you have many currency conversion or investment transactions, it can
generate very large journal entries.
With --interleaved
, each individual transfer is shown with source and
destination postings next to each other. This could be useful for
troubleshooting.
The default closing date is yesterday, or the journal's end date,
whichever is later. You can change this by specifying a report end
date with -e
. The last day of the report
period will be the closing date, eg -e 2024
means "close on
2023-12-31". The opening date is always the day after the closing date.
close and balance assertions
Balance assertions will be generated, verifying that the accounts have been reset to zero (and then restored to their previous balances, if there is an opening transaction).
These provide useful error checking, but you can ignore them temporarily
with -I
, or remove them if you prefer.
You probably should avoid filtering transactions by status or realness
(-C
, -R
, status:
), or generating postings (--auto
), with this
command, since the balance assertions would depend on these.
Note custom posting dates spanning the file boundary will disrupt the balance assertions:
2023-12-30 a purchase made in december, cleared in january
expenses:food 5
assets:bank:checking -5 ; date: 2023-01-02
To solve that you can transfer the money to and from a temporary account, in effect splitting the multi-day transaction into two single-day transactions:
; in 2022.journal:
2022-12-30 a purchase made in december, cleared in january
expenses:food 5
equity:pending -5
; in 2023.journal:
2023-01-02 last year's transaction cleared
equity:pending 5 = 0
assets:bank:checking -5
Example: retain earnings
Record 2022's revenues/expenses as retained earnings on 2022-12-31, appending the generated transaction to the journal:
$ hledger close --retain -f 2022.journal -p 2022 >> 2022.journal
Note 2022's income statement will now show only zeroes, because revenues and expenses have been moved entirely to equity. To see them again, you could exclude the retain transaction:
$ hledger -f 2022.journal is not:desc:'retain earnings'
Example: migrate balances to a new file
Close assets/liabilities/equity on 2022-12-31 and re-open them on 2023-01-01:
$ hledger close --migrate -f 2022.journal -p 2022
# copy/paste the closing transaction to the end of 2022.journal
# copy/paste the opening transaction to the start of 2023.journal
Now 2022's balance sheet will show only zeroes, indicating a balanced accounting equation. (Unless you are using @/@@ notation - in that case, try adding --infer-equity.) To see the end-of-year balances again, you could exclude the closing transaction:
$ hledger -f 2022.journal bs not:desc:'closing balances'
Example: excluding closing/opening transactions
When combining many files for multi-year reports, the closing/opening
transactions cause some noise in transaction-oriented reports like
print
and register
. You can exclude them as shown above, but
not:desc:...
is not ideal as it depends on consistent descriptions;
also you will want to avoid excluding the very first opening
transaction, which could be awkward. Here is one alternative, using
tags:
Add clopen:
tags to all opening/closing balances transactions except
the first, like this:
; 2021.journal
2021-06-01 first opening balances
...
2021-12-31 closing balances ; clopen:2022
...
; 2022.journal
2022-01-01 opening balances ; clopen:2022
...
2022-12-31 closing balances ; clopen:2023
...
; 2023.journal
2023-01-01 opening balances ; clopen:2023
...
Now, assuming a combined journal like:
; all.journal
include 2021.journal
include 2022.journal
include 2023.journal
The clopen:
tag can exclude all but the first opening transaction. To
show a clean multi-year checking register:
$ hledger -f all.journal areg checking not:tag:clopen
And the year values allow more precision. To show 2022's year-end balance sheet:
$ hledger -f all.journal bs -e2023 not:tag:clopen=2023
codes
List the codes seen in transactions, in the order parsed.
This command prints the value of each transaction's code field, in the order transactions were parsed. The transaction code is an optional value written in parentheses between the date and description, often used to store a cheque number, order number or similar.
Transactions aren't required to have a code, and missing or empty codes
will not be shown by default. With the -E
/--empty
flag, they will be
printed as blank lines.
You can add a query to select a subset of transactions.
Examples:
2022/1/1 (123) Supermarket
Food $5.00
Checking
2022/1/2 (124) Post Office
Postage $8.32
Checking
2022/1/3 Supermarket
Food $11.23
Checking
2022/1/4 (126) Post Office
Postage $3.21
Checking
$ hledger codes
123
124
126
$ hledger codes -E
123
124
126
commodities
List all commodity/currency symbols used or declared in the journal.
demo
Play demos of hledger usage in the terminal, if asciinema is installed.
Run this command with no argument to list the demos. To play a demo, write its number or a prefix or substring of its title. Tips:
Make your terminal window large enough to see the demo clearly.
Use the -s/--speed SPEED option to set your preferred playback speed,
eg -s4
to play at 4x original speed or -s.5
to play at half speed.
The default speed is 2x.
Other asciinema options can be added following a double dash, eg
-- -i.1
to limit pauses or -- -h
to list asciinema's other options.
During playback, several keys are available: SPACE to pause/unpause, . to step forward (while paused), CTRL-c quit.
Examples:
$ hledger demo # list available demos
$ hledger demo 1 # play the first demo at default speed (2x)
$ hledger demo install -s4 # play the "install" demo at 4x speed
descriptions
List the unique descriptions that appear in transactions.
This command lists the unique descriptions that appear in transactions, in alphabetic order. You can add a query to select a subset of transactions.
Example:
$ hledger descriptions
Store Name
Gas Station | Petrol
Person A
diff
Compares a particular account's transactions in two input files. It shows any transactions to this account which are in one file but not in the other.
More precisely, for each posting affecting this account in either file, it looks for a corresponding posting in the other file which posts the same amount to the same account (ignoring date, description, etc.) Since postings not transactions are compared, this also works when multiple bank transactions have been combined into a single journal entry.
This is useful eg if you have downloaded an account's transactions from your bank (eg as CSV data). When hledger and your bank disagree about the account balance, you can compare the bank data with your journal to find out the cause.
Examples:
$ hledger diff -f $LEDGER_FILE -f bank.csv assets:bank:giro
These transactions are in the first file only:
2014/01/01 Opening Balances
assets:bank:giro EUR ...
...
equity:opening balances EUR -...
These transactions are in the second file only:
files
List all files included in the journal. With a REGEX argument, only file names matching the regular expression (case sensitive) are shown.
help
Show the hledger user manual in the terminal, with info
, man
, or a
pager. With a TOPIC argument, open it at that topic if possible. TOPIC
can be any heading in the manual, or a heading prefix, case insensitive.
Eg: commands
, print
, forecast
, journal
, amount
,
"auto postings"
.
This command shows the hledger manual built in to your hledger version. It can be useful when offline, or when you prefer the terminal to a web browser, or when the appropriate hledger manual or viewing tools are not installed on your system.
By default it chooses the best viewer found in $PATH, trying (in this
order): info
, man
, $PAGER
, less
, more
. You can force the use
of info, man, or a pager with the -i
, -m
, or -p
flags, If no
viewer can be found, or the command is run non-interactively, it just
prints the manual to stdout.
If using info
, note that version 6 or greater is needed for TOPIC
lookup. If you are on mac you will likely have info 4.8, and should
consider installing a newer version, eg with brew install texinfo
(#1770).
Examples
$ hledger help --help # show how the help command works
$ hledger help # show the hledger manual with info, man or $PAGER
$ hledger help journal # show the journal topic in the hledger manual
$ hledger help -m journal # show it with man, even if info is installed
import
Read new transactions added to each FILE since last run, and add them to the journal. Or with --dry-run, just print the transactions that would be added. Or with --catchup, just mark all of the FILEs' transactions as imported, without actually importing any.
This command may append new transactions to the main journal file (which
should be in journal format). Existing transactions are not changed.
This is one of the few hledger commands that writes to the journal file
(see also add
).
Unlike other hledger commands, with import
the journal file is an
output file, and will be modified, though only by appending (existing
data will not be changed). The input files are specified as arguments,
so to import one or more CSV files to your main journal, you will run
hledger import bank.csv
or perhaps hledger import *.csv
.
Note you can import from any file format, though CSV files are the most common import source, and these docs focus on that case.
Deduplication
As a convenience import
does deduplication while reading
transactions. This does not mean "ignore transactions that look the
same", but rather "ignore transactions that have been seen before".
This is intended for when you are periodically importing foreign data
which may contain already-imported transactions. So eg, if every day you
download bank CSV files containing redundant data, you can safely run
hledger import bank.csv
and only new transactions will be imported.
(import
is idempotent.)
Since the items being read (CSV records, eg) often do not come with unique identifiers, hledger detects new transactions by date, assuming that:
- new items always have the newest dates
- item dates do not change across reads
- and items with the same date remain in the same relative order across reads.
These are often true of CSV files representing transactions, or true enough so that it works pretty well in practice. 1 is important, but violations of 2 and 3 amongst the old transactions won't matter (and if you import often, the new transactions will be few, so less likely to be the ones affected).
hledger remembers the latest date processed in each input file by saving
a hidden ".latest" state file in the same directory. Eg when reading
finance/bank.csv
, it will look for and update the
finance/.latest.bank.csv
state file. The format is simple: one or more
lines containing the same ISO-format date (YYYY-MM-DD), meaning "I have
processed transactions up to this date, and this many of them on that
date." Normally you won't see or manipulate these state files
yourself. But if needed, you can delete them to reset the state (making
all transactions "new"), or you can construct them to "catch up" to
a certain date.
Note deduplication (and updating of state files) can also be done by
print --new
, but this is less often used.
Import testing
With --dry-run
, the transactions that will be imported are printed to
the terminal, without updating your journal or state files. The output
is valid journal format, like the print command, so you can re-parse it.
Eg, to see any importable transactions which CSV rules have not
categorised:
$ hledger import --dry bank.csv | hledger -f- -I print unknown
or (live updating):
$ ls bank.csv* | entr bash -c 'echo ====; hledger import --dry bank.csv | hledger -f- -I print unknown'
Note: when importing from multiple files at once, it's currently possible for some .latest files to be updated successfully, while the actual import fails because of a problem in one of the files, leaving them out of sync (and causing some transactions to be missed). To prevent this, do a --dry-run first and fix any problems before the real import.
Importing balance assignments
Entries added by import will have their posting amounts made explicit
(like hledger print -x
). This means that any balance
assignments in
imported files must be evaluated; but, imported files don't get to see
the main file's account balances. As a result, importing entries with
balance assignments (eg from an institution that provides only balances
and not posting amounts) will probably generate incorrect posting
amounts. To avoid this problem, use print instead of import:
$ hledger print IMPORTFILE [--new] >> $LEDGER_FILE
(If you think import should leave amounts implicit like print does, please test it and send a pull request.)
Commodity display styles
Imported amounts will be formatted according to the canonical commodity styles (declared or inferred) in the main journal file.
incomestatement
(is)
This command displays an income statement, showing revenues and expenses during one or more periods. Amounts are shown with normal positive sign, as in conventional financial statements.
This report shows accounts declared with the Revenue
or Expense
type
(see account types).
Or if no such accounts are declared, it shows top-level accounts named
revenue
or income
or expense
(case insensitive, plurals allowed)
and their subaccounts.
Example:
$ hledger incomestatement
Income Statement
Revenues:
$-2 income
$-1 gifts
$-1 salary
--------------------
$-2
Expenses:
$2 expenses
$1 food
$1 supplies
--------------------
$2
Total:
--------------------
0
This command is a higher-level variant of the balance
command, and supports many of that command's features, such as
multi-period reports. It is similar to
hledger balance '(revenues|income)' expenses
, but with smarter account
detection, and revenues/income displayed with their sign flipped.
This command also supports the output
destination and output
format options The output formats supported
are txt
, csv
, html
, and (experimental) json
.
notes
List the unique notes that appear in transactions.
This command lists the unique notes that appear in transactions, in alphabetic order. You can add a query to select a subset of transactions. The note is the part of the transaction description after a | character (or if there is no |, the whole description).
Example:
$ hledger notes
Petrol
Snacks
payees
List the unique payee/payer names that appear in transactions.
This command lists unique payee/payer names which have been declared with payee directives (--declared), used in transaction descriptions (--used), or both (the default).
The payee/payer is the part of the transaction description before a | character (or if there is no |, the whole description).
You can add query arguments to select a subset of transactions. This implies --used.
Example:
$ hledger payees
Store Name
Gas Station
Person A
prices
Print market price directives from the journal. With --infer-market-prices, generate additional market prices from costs. With --infer-reverse-prices, also generate market prices by inverting known prices. Prices can be filtered by a query. Price amounts are displayed with their full precision.
Show transaction journal entries, sorted by date.
The print command displays full journal entries (transactions) from the
journal file, sorted by date (or with --date2
, by secondary
date).
Amounts are shown mostly normalised to commodity display style, eg the placement of commodity symbols will be consistent. All of their decimal places are shown, as in the original journal entry (with one alteration: in some cases trailing zeroes are added.)
Amounts are shown right-aligned within each transaction (but not across all transactions).
Directives and inter-transaction comments are not shown, currently. This means the print command is somewhat lossy, and if you are using it to reformat your journal you should take care to also copy over the directives and file-level comments.
Eg:
$ hledger print
2008/01/01 income
assets:bank:checking $1
income:salary $-1
2008/06/01 gift
assets:bank:checking $1
income:gifts $-1
2008/06/02 save
assets:bank:saving $1
assets:bank:checking $-1
2008/06/03 * eat & shop
expenses:food $1
expenses:supplies $1
assets:cash $-2
2008/12/31 * pay off
liabilities:debts $1
assets:bank:checking $-1
print's output is usually a valid hledger journal, and you can process it again with a second hledger command. This can be useful for certain kinds of search, eg:
# Show running total of food expenses paid from cash.
# -f- reads from stdin. -I/--ignore-assertions is sometimes needed.
$ hledger print assets:cash | hledger -f- -I reg expenses:food
There are some situations where print's output can become unparseable:
- Valuation affects posting amounts but not balance assertion or balance assignment amounts, potentially causing those to fail.
- Auto postings can generate postings with too many missing amounts.
- Account aliases can generate bad account names.
Normally, the journal entry's explicit or implicit amount style is
preserved. For example, when an amount is omitted in the journal, it
will not appear in the output. Similarly, when a cost is implied but not
written, it will not appear in the output. You can use the
-x
/--explicit
flag to make all amounts and costs explicit, which can
be useful for troubleshooting or for making your journal more readable
and robust against data entry errors. -x
is also implied by using any
of -B
,-V
,-X
,--value
.
Note, -x
/--explicit
will cause postings with a multi-commodity
amount (these can arise when a multi-commodity transaction has an
implicit amount) to be split into multiple single-commodity postings,
keeping the output parseable.
With -B
/--cost
, amounts with
costs are converted to cost
using that price. This can be used for troubleshooting.
With -m DESC
/--match=DESC
, print does a fuzzy search for one recent
transaction whose description is most similar to DESC. DESC should
contain at least two characters. If there is no similar-enough match, no
transaction will be shown and the program exit code will be non-zero.
With --new
, hledger prints only transactions it has not seen on a
previous run. This uses the same deduplication system as the
import
command. (See import's docs for details.)
This command also supports the output
destination and output
format options The output formats supported
are txt
, csv
, and (experimental) json
and sql
.
Here's an example of print's CSV output:
$ hledger print -Ocsv
"txnidx","date","date2","status","code","description","comment","account","amount","commodity","credit","debit","posting-status","posting-comment"
"1","2008/01/01","","","","income","","assets:bank:checking","1","$","","1","",""
"1","2008/01/01","","","","income","","income:salary","-1","$","1","","",""
"2","2008/06/01","","","","gift","","assets:bank:checking","1","$","","1","",""
"2","2008/06/01","","","","gift","","income:gifts","-1","$","1","","",""
"3","2008/06/02","","","","save","","assets:bank:saving","1","$","","1","",""
"3","2008/06/02","","","","save","","assets:bank:checking","-1","$","1","","",""
"4","2008/06/03","","*","","eat & shop","","expenses:food","1","$","","1","",""
"4","2008/06/03","","*","","eat & shop","","expenses:supplies","1","$","","1","",""
"4","2008/06/03","","*","","eat & shop","","assets:cash","-2","$","2","","",""
"5","2008/12/31","","*","","pay off","","liabilities:debts","1","$","","1","",""
"5","2008/12/31","","*","","pay off","","assets:bank:checking","-1","$","1","","",""
- There is one CSV record per posting, with the parent transaction's fields repeated.
- The "txnidx" (transaction index) field shows which postings belong to the same transaction. (This number might change if transactions are reordered within the file, files are parsed/included in a different order, etc.)
- The amount is separated into "commodity" (the symbol) and "amount" (numeric quantity) fields.
- The numeric amount is repeated in either the "credit" or "debit" column, for convenience. (Those names are not accurate in the accounting sense; it just puts negative amounts under credit and zero or greater amounts under debit.)
register
(reg)
Show postings and their running total.
The register command displays matched postings, across all accounts, in
date order, with their running total or running historical balance. (See
also the aregister
command, which shows matched
transactions in a specific account.)
register normally shows line per posting, but note that multi-commodity amounts will occupy multiple lines (one line per commodity).
It is typically used with a query selecting a particular account, to see that account's activity:
$ hledger register checking
2008/01/01 income assets:bank:checking $1 $1
2008/06/01 gift assets:bank:checking $1 $2
2008/06/02 save assets:bank:checking $-1 $1
2008/12/31 pay off assets:bank:checking $-1 0
With --date2
, it shows and sorts by secondary date instead.
For performance reasons, column widths are chosen based on the first
1000 lines; this means unusually wide values in later lines can cause
visual discontinuities as column widths are adjusted. If you want to
ensure perfect alignment, at the cost of more time and memory, use the
--align-all
flag.
The --historical
/-H
flag adds the balance from any undisplayed prior
postings to the running total. This is useful when you want to see only
recent activity, with a historically accurate running balance:
$ hledger register checking -b 2008/6 --historical
2008/06/01 gift assets:bank:checking $1 $2
2008/06/02 save assets:bank:checking $-1 $1
2008/12/31 pay off assets:bank:checking $-1 0
The --depth
option limits the amount of sub-account detail displayed.
The --average
/-A
flag shows the running average posting amount
instead of the running total (so, the final number displayed is the
average for the whole report period). This flag implies --empty
(see
below). It is affected by --historical
. It works best when showing
just one account and one commodity.
The --related
/-r
flag shows the other postings in the transactions
of the postings which would normally be shown.
The --invert
flag negates all amounts. For example, it can be used on
an income account where amounts are normally displayed as negative
numbers. It's also useful to show postings on the checking account
together with the related account:
$ hledger register --related --invert assets:checking
With a reporting interval, register shows summary postings, one per interval, aggregating the postings to each account:
$ hledger register --monthly income
2008/01 income:salary $-1 $-1
2008/06 income:gifts $-1 $-2
Periods with no activity, and summary postings with a zero amount, are
not shown by default; use the --empty
/-E
flag to see them:
$ hledger register --monthly income -E
2008/01 income:salary $-1 $-1
2008/02 0 $-1
2008/03 0 $-1
2008/04 0 $-1
2008/05 0 $-1
2008/06 income:gifts $-1 $-2
2008/07 0 $-2
2008/08 0 $-2
2008/09 0 $-2
2008/10 0 $-2
2008/11 0 $-2
2008/12 0 $-2
Often, you'll want to see just one line per interval. The --depth
option helps with this, causing subaccounts to be aggregated:
$ hledger register --monthly assets --depth 1h
2008/01 assets $1 $1
2008/06 assets $-1 0
2008/12 assets $-1 $-1
Note when using report intervals, if you specify start/end dates these will be adjusted outward if necessary to contain a whole number of intervals. This ensures that the first and last intervals are full length and comparable to the others in the report.
With -m DESC
/--match=DESC
, register does a fuzzy search for one
recent posting whose description is most similar to DESC. DESC should
contain at least two characters. If there is no similar-enough match, no
posting will be shown and the program exit code will be non-zero.
Custom register output
register uses the full terminal width by default, except on windows. You
can override this by setting the COLUMNS
environment variable (not a
bash shell variable) or by using the --width
/-w
option.
The description and account columns normally share the space equally
(about half of (width - 40) each). You can adjust this by adding a
description width as part of --width's argument, comma-separated:
--width W,D
. Here's a diagram (won't display correctly in --help):
<--------------------------------- width (W) ---------------------------------->
date (10) description (D) account (W-41-D) amount (12) balance (12)
DDDDDDDDDD dddddddddddddddddddd aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa AAAAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAAAA
and some examples:
$ hledger reg # use terminal width (or 80 on windows)
$ hledger reg -w 100 # use width 100
$ COLUMNS=100 hledger reg # set with one-time environment variable
$ export COLUMNS=100; hledger reg # set till session end (or window resize)
$ hledger reg -w 100,40 # set overall width 100, description width 40
$ hledger reg -w $COLUMNS,40 # use terminal width, & description width 40
This command also supports the output
destination and output
format options The output formats supported
are txt
, csv
, and (experimental) json
.
rewrite
Print all transactions, rewriting the postings of matched transactions. For now the only rewrite available is adding new postings, like print --auto.
This is a start at a generic rewriter of transaction entries. It reads the default journal and prints the transactions, like print, but adds one or more specified postings to any transactions matching QUERY. The posting amounts can be fixed, or a multiplier of the existing transaction's first posting amount.
Examples:
$ hledger-rewrite.hs ^income --add-posting '(liabilities:tax) *.33 ; income tax' --add-posting '(reserve:gifts) $100'
$ hledger-rewrite.hs expenses:gifts --add-posting '(reserve:gifts) *-1"'
$ hledger-rewrite.hs -f rewrites.hledger
rewrites.hledger may consist of entries like:
= ^income amt:<0 date:2017
(liabilities:tax) *0.33 ; tax on income
(reserve:grocery) *0.25 ; reserve 25% for grocery
(reserve:) *0.25 ; reserve 25% for grocery
Note the single quotes to protect the dollar sign from bash, and the two spaces between account and amount.
More:
$ hledger rewrite -- [QUERY] --add-posting "ACCT AMTEXPR" ...
$ hledger rewrite -- ^income --add-posting '(liabilities:tax) *.33'
$ hledger rewrite -- expenses:gifts --add-posting '(budget:gifts) *-1"'
$ hledger rewrite -- ^income --add-posting '(budget:foreign currency) *0.25 JPY; diversify'
Argument for --add-posting
option is a usual posting of transaction
with an exception for amount specification. More precisely, you can use
'*'
(star symbol) before the amount to indicate that that this is a
factor for an amount of original matched posting. If the amount includes
a commodity name, the new posting amount will be in the new commodity;
otherwise, it will be in the matched posting amount's commodity.
Re-write rules in a file
During the run this tool will execute so called "Automated Transactions" found in any journal it process. I.e instead of specifying this operations in command line you can put them in a journal file.
$ rewrite-rules.journal
Make contents look like this:
= ^income
(liabilities:tax) *.33
= expenses:gifts
budget:gifts *-1
assets:budget *1
Note that '='
(equality symbol) that is used instead of date in
transactions you usually write. It indicates the query by which you want
to match the posting to add new ones.
$ hledger rewrite -- -f input.journal -f rewrite-rules.journal > rewritten-tidy-output.journal
This is something similar to the commands pipeline:
$ hledger rewrite -- -f input.journal '^income' --add-posting '(liabilities:tax) *.33' \
| hledger rewrite -- -f - expenses:gifts --add-posting 'budget:gifts *-1' \
--add-posting 'assets:budget *1' \
> rewritten-tidy-output.journal
It is important to understand that relative order of such entries in journal is important. You can re-use result of previously added postings.
Diff output format
To use this tool for batch modification of your journal files you may find useful output in form of unified diff.
$ hledger rewrite -- --diff -f examples/sample.journal '^income' --add-posting '(liabilities:tax) *.33'
Output might look like:
--- /tmp/examples/sample.journal
+++ /tmp/examples/sample.journal
@@ -18,3 +18,4 @@
2008/01/01 income
- assets:bank:checking $1
+ assets:bank:checking $1
income:salary
+ (liabilities:tax) 0
@@ -22,3 +23,4 @@
2008/06/01 gift
- assets:bank:checking $1
+ assets:bank:checking $1
income:gifts
+ (liabilities:tax) 0
If you'll pass this through patch
tool you'll get transactions
containing the posting that matches your query be updated. Note that
multiple files might be update according to list of input files
specified via --file
options and include
directives inside of these
files.
Be careful. Whole transaction being re-formatted in a style of output
from hledger print
.
See also:
https://github.com/simonmichael/hledger/issues/99
rewrite vs. print --auto
This command predates print --auto, and currently does much the same thing, but with these differences:
-
with multiple files, rewrite lets rules in any file affect all other files. print --auto uses standard directive scoping; rules affect only child files.
-
rewrite's query limits which transactions can be rewritten; all are printed. print --auto's query limits which transactions are printed.
-
rewrite applies rules specified on command line or in the journal. print --auto applies rules specified in the journal.
roi
Shows the time-weighted (TWR) and money-weighted (IRR) rate of return on your investments.
At a minimum, you need to supply a query (which could be just an account
name) to select your investment(s) with --inv
, and another query to
identify your profit and loss transactions with --pnl
.
If you do not record changes in the value of your investment manually,
or do not require computation of time-weighted return (TWR), --pnl
could be an empty query (--pnl ""
or --pnl STR
where STR
does not
match any of your accounts).
This command will compute and display the internalized rate of return (IRR) and time-weighted rate of return (TWR) for your investments for the time period requested. Both rates of return are annualized before display, regardless of the length of reporting interval.
Price directives will be taken into account if you supply appropriate
--cost
or --value
flags (see
VALUATION).
Note, in some cases this report can fail, for these reasons:
- Error (NotBracketed): No solution for Internal Rate of Return (IRR). Possible causes: IRR is huge (>1000000%), balance of investment becomes negative at some point in time.
- Error (SearchFailed): Failed to find solution for Internal Rate of Return (IRR). Either search does not converge to a solution, or converges too slowly.
Examples:
-
Using roi to compute total return of investment in stocks: https://github.com/simonmichael/hledger/blob/master/examples/investing/roi-unrealised.ledger
-
Cookbook > Return on Investment: https://hledger.org/roi.html
Spaces and special characters in --inv
and --pnl
Note that --inv
and --pnl
's argument is a query, and queries could
have several space-separated terms (see
QUERIES).
To indicate that all search terms form single command-line argument, you will need to put them in quotes (see Special characters):
$ hledger roi --inv 'term1 term2 term3 ...'
If any query terms contain spaces themselves, you will need an extra level of nested quoting, eg:
$ hledger roi --inv="'Assets:Test 1'" --pnl="'Equity:Unrealized Profit and Loss'"
Semantics of --inv
and --pnl
Query supplied to --inv
has to match all transactions that are related
to your investment. Transactions not matching --inv
will be ignored.
In these transactions, ROI will conside postings that match --inv
to
be "investment postings" and other postings (not matching --inv
)
will be sorted into two categories: "cash flow" and "profit and
loss", as ROI needs to know which part of the investment value is your
contributions and which is due to the return on investment.
-
"Cash flow" is depositing or withdrawing money, buying or selling assets, or otherwise converting between your investment commodity and any other commodity. Example:
2019-01-01 Investing in Snake Oil assets:cash -$100 investment:snake oil 2020-01-01 Selling my Snake Oil assets:cash $10 investment:snake oil = 0
-
"Profit and loss" is change in the value of your investment:
2019-06-01 Snake Oil falls in value investment:snake oil = $57 equity:unrealized profit or loss
All non-investment postings are assumed to be "cash flow", unless they
match --pnl
query. Changes in value of your investment due to "profit
and loss" postings will be considered as part of your investment
return.
Example: if you use --inv snake --pnl equity:unrealized
, then postings
in the example below would be classifed as:
2019-01-01 Snake Oil #1
assets:cash -$100 ; cash flow posting
investment:snake oil ; investment posting
2019-03-01 Snake Oil #2
equity:unrealized pnl -$100 ; profit and loss posting
snake oil ; investment posting
2019-07-01 Snake Oil #3
equity:unrealized pnl ; profit and loss posting
cash -$100 ; cash flow posting
snake oil $50 ; investment posting
IRR and TWR explained
"ROI" stands for "return on investment". Traditionally this was computed as a difference between current value of investment and its initial value, expressed in percentage of the initial value.
However, this approach is only practical in simple cases, where investments receives no in-flows or out-flows of money, and where rate of growth is fixed over time. For more complex scenarios you need different ways to compute rate of return, and this command implements two of them: IRR and TWR.
Internal rate of return, or "IRR" (also called "money-weighted rate of return") takes into account effects of in-flows and out-flows. Naively, if you are withdrawing from your investment, your future gains would be smaller (in absolute numbers), and will be a smaller percentage of your initial investment, and if you are adding to your investment, you will receive bigger absolute gains (but probably at the same rate of return). IRR is a way to compute rate of return for each period between in-flow or out-flow of money, and then combine them in a way that gives you a compound annual rate of return that investment is expected to generate.
As mentioned before, in-flows and out-flows would be any cash that you
personally put in or withdraw, and for the "roi" command, these are
the postings that match the query in the--inv
argument and NOT match
the query in the--pnl
argument.
If you manually record changes in the value of your investment as transactions that balance them against "profit and loss" (or "unrealized gains") account or use price directives, then in order for IRR to compute the precise effect of your in-flows and out-flows on the rate of return, you will need to record the value of your investement on or close to the days when in- or out-flows occur.
In technical terms, IRR uses the same approach as computation of net
present value, and tries to find a discount rate that makes net present
value of all the cash flows of your investment to add up to zero. This
could be hard to wrap your head around, especially if you haven't done
discounted cash flow analysis before. Implementation of IRR in hledger
should produce results that match the XIRR
formula in Excel.
Second way to compute rate of return that roi
command implements is
called "time-weighted rate of return" or "TWR". Like IRR, it will
also break the history of your investment into periods between in-flows,
out-flows and value changes, to compute rate of return per each period
and then a compound rate of return. However, internal workings of TWR
are quite different.
TWR represents your investment as an imaginary "unit fund" where in-flows/ out-flows lead to buying or selling "units" of your investment and changes in its value change the value of "investment unit". Change in "unit price" over the reporting period gives you rate of return of your investment.
References:
- Explanation of rate of return
- Explanation of IRR
- Explanation of TWR
- Examples of computing IRR and TWR and discussion of the limitations of both metrics
stats
Show journal and performance statistics.
The stats command displays summary information for the whole journal, or a matched part of it. With a reporting interval, it shows a report for each report period.
At the end, it shows (in the terminal) the overall run time and number
of transactions processed per second. Note these are approximate and
will vary based on machine, current load, data size, hledger version,
haskell lib versions, GHC version.. but they may be of interest. The
stats
command's run time is similar to that of a single-column
balance report.
Example:
$ hledger stats -f examples/1000x1000x10.journal
Main file : /Users/simon/src/hledger/examples/1000x1000x10.journal
Included files :
Transactions span : 2000-01-01 to 2002-09-27 (1000 days)
Last transaction : 2002-09-26 (6995 days ago)
Transactions : 1000 (1.0 per day)
Transactions last 30 days: 0 (0.0 per day)
Transactions last 7 days : 0 (0.0 per day)
Payees/descriptions : 1000
Accounts : 1000 (depth 10)
Commodities : 26 (A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z)
Market prices : 1000 (A)
Run time : 0.12 s
Throughput : 8342 txns/s
This command supports the -o/--output-file option (but not -O/--output-format selection).
tags
List the tags used in the journal, or their values.
This command lists the tag names used in the journal, whether on transactions, postings, or account declarations.
With a TAGREGEX argument, only tag names matching this regular expression (case insensitive, infix matched) are shown.
With QUERY arguments, only transactions and accounts matching this query are considered. If the query involves transaction fields (date:, desc:, amt:, ...), the search is restricted to the matched transactions and their accounts.
With the --values flag, the tags' unique non-empty values are listed instead. With -E/--empty, blank/empty values are also shown.
With --parsed, tags or values are shown in the order they were parsed, with duplicates included. (Except, tags from account declarations are always shown first.)
Tip: remember, accounts also acquire tags from their parents, postings also acquire tags from their account and transaction, transactions also acquire tags from their postings.
test
Run built-in unit tests.
This command runs the unit tests built in to hledger and hledger-lib, printing the results on stdout. If any test fails, the exit code will be non-zero.
This is mainly used by hledger developers, but you can also use it to sanity-check the installed hledger executable on your platform. All tests are expected to pass - if you ever see a failure, please report as a bug!
This command also accepts tasty test runner options, written after a -- (double hyphen). Eg to run only the tests in Hledger.Data.Amount, with ANSI colour codes disabled:
$ hledger test -- -pData.Amount --color=never
For help on these, see https://github.com/feuerbach/tasty#options
(-- --help
currently doesn't show them).
PART 5: COMMON TASKS
Here are some quick examples of how to do some basic tasks with hledger.
Getting help
Here's how to list commands and view options and command docs:
$ hledger # show available commands
$ hledger --help # show common options
$ hledger CMD --help # show CMD's options, common options and CMD's documentation
You can also view your hledger version's manual in several formats by using the help command. Eg:
$ hledger help # show the hledger manual with info, man or $PAGER (best available)
$ hledger help journal # show the journal topic in the hledger manual
$ hledger help --help # find out more about the help command
To view manuals and introductory docs on the web, visit https://hledger.org. Chat and mail list support and discussion archives can be found at https://hledger.org/support.
Constructing command lines
hledger has a flexible command line interface. We strive to keep it simple and ergonomic, but if you run into one of the sharp edges described in OPTIONS, here are some tips that might help:
- command-specific options must go after the command (it's fine to
put common options there too:
hledger CMD OPTS ARGS
) - running add-on executables directly simplifies command line parsing
(
hledger-ui OPTS ARGS
) - enclose "problematic" args in single quotes
- if needed, also add a backslash to hide regular expression metacharacters from the shell
- to see how a misbehaving command line is being parsed, add
--debug=2
.
Starting a journal file
hledger looks for your accounting data in a journal file,
$HOME/.hledger.journal
by default:
$ hledger stats
The hledger journal file "/Users/simon/.hledger.journal" was not found.
Please create it first, eg with "hledger add" or a text editor.
Or, specify an existing journal file with -f or LEDGER_FILE.
You can override this by setting the LEDGER_FILE
environment variable
(see below). It's a good practice to keep this important file under
version control, and to start a new file each year. So you could do
something like this:
$ mkdir ~/finance
$ cd ~/finance
$ git init
Initialized empty Git repository in /Users/simon/finance/.git/
$ touch 2023.journal
$ echo "export LEDGER_FILE=$HOME/finance/2023.journal" >> ~/.profile
$ source ~/.profile
$ hledger stats
Main file : /Users/simon/finance/2023.journal
Included files :
Transactions span : to (0 days)
Last transaction : none
Transactions : 0 (0.0 per day)
Transactions last 30 days: 0 (0.0 per day)
Transactions last 7 days : 0 (0.0 per day)
Payees/descriptions : 0
Accounts : 0 (depth 0)
Commodities : 0 ()
Market prices : 0 ()
Setting LEDGER_FILE
How to set LEDGER_FILE
permanently depends on your setup:
On unix and mac, running these commands in the terminal will work for many people; adapt as needed:
$ echo 'export LEDGER_FILE=~/finance/2023.journal' >> ~/.profile
$ source ~/.profile
When correctly configured, in a new terminal window
env | grep LEDGER_FILE
will show your file, and so will
hledger files
.
On mac, this additional step might be helpful for GUI applications (like
Emacs started from the dock): add an entry to
~/.MacOSX/environment.plist
like
{
"LEDGER_FILE" : "~/finance/2023.journal"
}
and then run killall Dock
in a terminal window (or restart the
machine).
On Windows, see https://www.java.com/en/download/help/path.html, or try running these commands in a powershell window (let us know if it persists across a reboot, and if you need to be an Administrator):
> CD
> MKDIR finance
> SETX LEDGER_FILE "C:\Users\USERNAME\finance\2023.journal"
Setting opening balances
Pick a starting date for which you can look up the balances of some real-world assets (bank accounts, wallet..) and liabilities (credit cards..).
To avoid a lot of data entry, you may want to start with just one or two accounts, like your checking account or cash wallet; and pick a recent starting date, like today or the start of the week. You can always come back later and add more accounts and older transactions, eg going back to january 1st.
Add an opening balances transaction to the journal, declaring the balances on this date. Here are two ways to do it:
-
The first way: open the journal in any text editor and save an entry like this:
2023-01-01 * opening balances assets:bank:checking $1000 = $1000 assets:bank:savings $2000 = $2000 assets:cash $100 = $100 liabilities:creditcard $-50 = $-50 equity:opening/closing balances
These are start-of-day balances, ie whatever was in the account at the end of the previous day.
The * after the date is an optional status flag. Here it means "cleared & confirmed".
The currency symbols are optional, but usually a good idea as you'll be dealing with multiple currencies sooner or later.
The = amounts are optional balance assertions, providing extra error checking.
-
The second way: run
hledger add
and follow the prompts to record a similar transaction:$ hledger add Adding transactions to journal file /Users/simon/finance/2023.journal Any command line arguments will be used as defaults. Use tab key to complete, readline keys to edit, enter to accept defaults. An optional (CODE) may follow transaction dates. An optional ; COMMENT may follow descriptions or amounts. If you make a mistake, enter < at any prompt to go one step backward. To end a transaction, enter . when prompted. To quit, enter . at a date prompt or press control-d or control-c. Date [2023-02-07]: 2023-01-01 Description: * opening balances Account 1: assets:bank:checking Amount 1: $1000 Account 2: assets:bank:savings Amount 2 [$-1000]: $2000 Account 3: assets:cash Amount 3 [$-3000]: $100 Account 4: liabilities:creditcard Amount 4 [$-3100]: $-50 Account 5: equity:opening/closing balances Amount 5 [$-3050]: Account 6 (or . or enter to finish this transaction): . 2023-01-01 * opening balances assets:bank:checking $1000 assets:bank:savings $2000 assets:cash $100 liabilities:creditcard $-50 equity:opening/closing balances $-3050 Save this transaction to the journal ? [y]: Saved. Starting the next transaction (. or ctrl-D/ctrl-C to quit) Date [2023-01-01]: .
If you're using version control, this could be a good time to commit the journal. Eg:
$ git commit -m 'initial balances' 2023.journal
Recording transactions
As you spend or receive money, you can record these transactions using one of the methods above (text editor, hledger add) or by using the hledger-iadd or hledger-web add-ons, or by using the import command to convert CSV data downloaded from your bank.
Here are some simple transactions, see the hledger_journal(5) manual and hledger.org for more ideas:
2023/1/10 * gift received
assets:cash $20
income:gifts
2023.1.12 * farmers market
expenses:food $13
assets:cash
2023-01-15 paycheck
income:salary
assets:bank:checking $1000
Reconciling
Periodically you should reconcile - compare your hledger-reported balances against external sources of truth, like bank statements or your bank's website - to be sure that your ledger accurately represents the real-world balances (and, that the real-world institutions have not made a mistake!). This gets easy and fast with (1) practice and (2) frequency. If you do it daily, it can take 2-10 minutes. If you let it pile up, expect it to take longer as you hunt down errors and discrepancies.
A typical workflow:
-
Reconcile cash. Count what's in your wallet. Compare with what hledger reports (
hledger bal cash
). If they are different, try to remember the missing transaction, or look for the error in the already-recorded transactions. A register report can be helpful (hledger reg cash
). If you can't find the error, add an adjustment transaction. Eg if you have $105 after the above, and can't explain the missing $2, it could be:2023-01-16 * adjust cash assets:cash $-2 = $105 expenses:misc
-
Reconcile checking. Log in to your bank's website. Compare today's (cleared) balance with hledger's cleared balance (
hledger bal checking -C
). If they are different, track down the error or record the missing transaction(s) or add an adjustment transaction, similar to the above. Unlike the cash case, you can usually compare the transaction history and running balance from your bank with the one reported byhledger reg checking -C
. This will be easier if you generally record transaction dates quite similar to your bank's clearing dates. -
Repeat for other asset/liability accounts.
Tip: instead of the register command, use hledger-ui to see a
live-updating register while you edit the journal:
hledger-ui --watch --register checking -C
After reconciling, it could be a good time to mark the reconciled
transactions' status as "cleared and confirmed", if you want to track
that, by adding the *
marker. Eg in the paycheck transaction above,
insert *
between 2023-01-15
and paycheck
If you're using version control, this can be another good time to commit:
$ git commit -m 'txns' 2023.journal
Reporting
Here are some basic reports.
Show all transactions:
$ hledger print
2023-01-01 * opening balances
assets:bank:checking $1000
assets:bank:savings $2000
assets:cash $100
liabilities:creditcard $-50
equity:opening/closing balances $-3050
2023-01-10 * gift received
assets:cash $20
income:gifts
2023-01-12 * farmers market
expenses:food $13
assets:cash
2023-01-15 * paycheck
income:salary
assets:bank:checking $1000
2023-01-16 * adjust cash
assets:cash $-2 = $105
expenses:misc
Show account names, and their hierarchy:
$ hledger accounts --tree
assets
bank
checking
savings
cash
equity
opening/closing balances
expenses
food
misc
income
gifts
salary
liabilities
creditcard
Show all account totals:
$ hledger balance
$4105 assets
$4000 bank
$2000 checking
$2000 savings
$105 cash
$-3050 equity:opening/closing balances
$15 expenses
$13 food
$2 misc
$-1020 income
$-20 gifts
$-1000 salary
$-50 liabilities:creditcard
--------------------
0
Show only asset and liability balances, as a flat list, limited to depth 2:
$ hledger bal assets liabilities -2
$4000 assets:bank
$105 assets:cash
$-50 liabilities:creditcard
--------------------
$4055
Show the same thing without negative numbers, formatted as a simple balance sheet:
$ hledger bs -2
Balance Sheet 2023-01-16
|| 2023-01-16
========================++============
Assets ||
------------------------++------------
assets:bank || $4000
assets:cash || $105
------------------------++------------
|| $4105
========================++============
Liabilities ||
------------------------++------------
liabilities:creditcard || $50
------------------------++------------
|| $50
========================++============
Net: || $4055
The final total is your "net worth" on the end date. (Or use bse
for
a full balance sheet with equity.)
Show income and expense totals, formatted as an income statement:
hledger is
Income Statement 2023-01-01-2023-01-16
|| 2023-01-01-2023-01-16
===============++=======================
Revenues ||
---------------++-----------------------
income:gifts || $20
income:salary || $1000
---------------++-----------------------
|| $1020
===============++=======================
Expenses ||
---------------++-----------------------
expenses:food || $13
expenses:misc || $2
---------------++-----------------------
|| $15
===============++=======================
Net: || $1005
The final total is your net income during this period.
Show transactions affecting your wallet, with running total:
$ hledger register cash
2023-01-01 opening balances assets:cash $100 $100
2023-01-10 gift received assets:cash $20 $120
2023-01-12 farmers market assets:cash $-13 $107
2023-01-16 adjust cash assets:cash $-2 $105
Show weekly posting counts as a bar chart:
$ hledger activity -W
2019-12-30 *****
2023-01-06 ****
2023-01-13 ****
Migrating to a new file
At the end of the year, you may want to continue your journal in a new file, so that old transactions don't slow down or clutter your reports, and to help ensure the integrity of your accounting history. See the close command.
If using version control, don't forget to git add
the new file.
BUGS
We welcome bug reports in the hledger issue tracker (shortcut: http://bugs.hledger.org), or on the #hledger chat or hledger mail list (https://hledger.org/support).
Some known issues and limitations:
The need to precede add-on command options with --
when invoked from
hledger is awkward. (See Command options, Constructing command lines.)
A UTF-8-aware system locale must be configured to work with non-ascii data. (See Unicode characters, Troubleshooting.)
On Microsoft Windows, depending whether you are running in a CMD window
or a Cygwin/MSYS/Mintty window and how you installed hledger, non-ascii
characters and colours may not be supported, and the tab key may not be
supported by hledger add
. (Running in a WSL window should resolve
these.)
When processing large data files, hledger uses more memory than Ledger.
Troubleshooting
Here are some common issues you might encounter when you run hledger, and how to resolve them (and remember also you can usually get quick Support):
PATH issues: I get an error like "No command 'hledger' found"
Depending how you installed hledger, the executables may not be in your
shell's PATH. Eg on unix systems, stack installs hledger in
~/.local/bin
and cabal installs it in ~/.cabal/bin
. You may need to
add one of these directories to your shell's PATH, and/or open a new
terminal window.
LEDGER_FILE issues: I configured LEDGER_FILE but hledger is not using it
LEDGER_FILE
should be a real environment variable, not just a shell variable. Eg on unix, the commandenv | grep LEDGER_FILE
should show it. You may need to useexport
(see https://stackoverflow.com/a/7411509).- You may need to force your shell to see the new configuration. A simple way is to close your terminal window and open a new one.
LANG issues: I get errors like "Illegal byte sequence" or "Invalid
or incomplete multibyte or wide character" or "commitAndReleaseBuffer:
invalid argument (invalid character)"
Programs compiled with GHC (hledger, haskell build tools, etc.) need the
system locale to be UTF-8-aware, or they will fail when they encounter
non-ascii characters. To fix it, set the LANG environment variable to a
locale which supports UTF-8 and which is installed on your system.
On unix, locale -a
lists the installed locales. Look for one which
mentions utf8
, UTF-8
or similar. Some examples: C.UTF-8
,
en_US.utf-8
, fr_FR.utf8
. If necessary, use your system package
manager to install one. Then select it by setting the LANG
environment
variable. Note, exact spelling and capitalisation of the locale name may
be important: Here's one common way to configure this permanently for
your shell:
$ echo "export LANG=en_US.utf8" >>~/.profile
# close and re-open terminal window
COMPATIBILITY ISSUES: hledger gives an error with my Ledger file
Not all of Ledger's journal file syntax or feature set is supported.
See hledger and Ledger for full details.