Transity
The plain text accounting tool of the future.
Keep track of your
For help please come visit us on one of the following sites:
- List of Features / TODOs
- Installation
- License
- Usage
- Journal File Format
- Plotting
- Import from Ledger CLI
- FAQ
- Comparison with Hledger
- Ideas
- Related
List of Features / TODOs
- Modeled on transactions instead of debiting / crediting accounts => Support for complex transactions made up of several transfers
- Dedicated payer (from) and payee (to) fields (ledger only supports payee)
- No misuse of accounts as categories / tags => direct support for them
- No hard-coded asset / liability connotation as it is viewpoint dependent => Choose viewpoint when printing the balance
- Easily editable & processable file format based on YAML
- Clear separation between
- Physical account (e.g. wallet, bank account)
- Entities (e.g. my mum, a company)
- Purpose of transaction (food, travel)
- Initial balances
- High precision timestamps
- Including nanoseconds
- BigInt rational numbers to eliminate rounding errors
- Support for all states of transaction life cycle
- Request - Request to exchange a commodity
- Offer - Specification of commodity & expected trade item
- Acceptance - Affirmation of interest in offered exchange
- Fulfillments
- Certification - Acknowledgment that exchange was performed
- Support for any type of commodity (e.g. even time and messages)
- Differentiation between transfers, transactions & exchanges
- Special syntax for exchanges
- Meta data for all entities (transactions, accounts, entities, …)
- Verifies sole use of predefined entities
- Checks match with verification balances
- Features for duplicates
- Print list of possible duplicates
- Label an entry explicitly as a duplicate to store it in several places
- Syntax checking in addition to syntax highlighting
- CSV import
- Link to receipt file
- Dashboard
- Budgets (including progress visualization)
- Export to various formats for post-processing
- Gnuplot (for trends)
- Graphviz (for account / entity relations)
- JS-Sequence-Diagrams (sequence of transactions)
- (H)ledger Format (for using (H)ledger exclusive features)
- Additional features for crypto currencies
- TODO: Think about what features exactly
- Multi file support
- Cache-files to speed up processing of large data sets
- Support for time limited commodities (e.g. subscription for a month)
- Commodities
- Treat as scientific units (e.g 1 k€ == 1000 €)
- Hard vs Soft vs Fungible vs …
- Define which are allowed / prohibited for each account
- Generate EPC QR Codes for transfers
Installation
Transity is distributed as a JavaScript bundle and can therefore be installed via npm:
npm install --global transity
License
While Transity is licensed under the AGPL-3.0-or-later and can therefore be used free of charge, I hope you will acknowledge the work and effort it takes to maintain and improve this software and make a donation via my GitHub Support page.
If you find Transity valuable and/or use it regularly this should be a small nuisance for you, but it would mean the world for me! It would mean that I can spend more time on this project and bring it to the next level!
Thanks a lot for your support!
For including Transity in proprietary closed source products, please contact me!
Usage
$ transity balance examples/journal.yaml
anna 1 evil-machine
-49978.02 €
ben -50 $
-1.432592 BTC
-100 €
evil-corp -1 evil-machine
50015 €
good-inc -100 €
grocery-shop 11.97 €
john 371.04 €
50 $
1.432592 BTC
:default 219.99 €
giro 50 $
1.432592 BTC
85 €
wallet 66.05 €
If linked modules aren't exposed in your path you can also run
cli/main.js balance examples/journal.yaml
List complete usage manual by simply calling transity
without any arguments.
$ transity
Usage: transity <command> <path/to/journal.yaml>
Command Description
------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------
balance Simple balance of all accounts
transactions All transactions and their transfers
transfers All transfers with one transfer per line
entries All individual deposits & withdrawals
entries-by-account All individual deposits & withdrawals grouped by account
gplot Code and data for gnuplot impulse diagram
to visualize transfers of all accounts
gplot-cumul Code and data for cumuluative gnuplot step chart
to visualize balance of all accounts
Check Order of Entries
Check if all entries are in a chronological order
ag --nonumbers "^ utc:" journals/main.yaml | tr -d "\'" | sort -c
Retrieving Data from Banks
Transity includes a few scripts located at ./scripts to automate a Chrome browser to download data. It supports downloading CSV files of all transactions and converting them to journal files and retrieving the current account balance:
Currently supported accounts for transactions:
Currently supported accounts for balances:
Contributions are very welcome!
Script Usage
node scripts/transactions/hypovereinsbank.js > transactions.yaml
This will prompt you for your credentials and afterwards automate a headless Chrome instance to download and convert the data.
Journal File Format
A minimal journal file is a YAML file with following format:
owner: anna
commodities:
- id: €
name: Euro
alias:
- EUR
note: Currency used in the European Union
utc: '2017-04-02 19:33:53'
entities:
- id: anna
name: Anna Smith
utc: '2017-04-02 19:33:28'
tags:
- person
accounts:
- id: wallet
name: Wallet
note: Anna's black wallet
utc: '2017-04-02 19:33:28'
tags:
- wallet
- id: evil-corp
name: Evil Corporation
utc: '2017-04-02 19:33:28'
note: The Evil Corporation in the United States of Evil
tags:
- company
transactions:
- title: Purchase of evil machine
transfers:
- utc: '2017-02-17'
from: anna
to: evil-corp
amount: 50000 €
- utc: '2017-02-17'
from: evil-corp
to: anna
amount: 1 evil-machine
Plotting
By default all accounts are plotted.
To limit it to only a subsection use awk
to filter the output.
For example all transactions of Euro accounts:
transity gplot examples/journal.yaml \
| awk '/^$/ || /(EOD|^set terminal)/ || /€/' \
| gnuplot \
| imgcat
Or all account balances of Euro accounts over time:
transity gplot-cumul examples/journal.yaml \
| awk '/^$/ || /(EOD|^set terminal)/ || /€/' \
| gnuplot \
| imgcat
Import from Ledger CLI
Execute the included ledger2transity script:
./ledger2transity.sh examples/hledger.journal > transactions.csv
Convert transactions.csv
to YAML with e.g. browserling.com/tools/csv-to-yaml
Attention:
- Merge adjacent entries as each entry only debits / credits an account.
A transaction always involves 2 accounts (
from
andto
). (For expenses basically copy the ledger-account from the second entry into thefrom
field of the first entry) from
andto
might be reversed for income (depending on how thepayee
field was used)- Account names of Ledger-CLI are interpreted as tags Transity understands accounts as physical accounts
- The note is duplicated in the
tags
field. There is no way to get only the tags in Ledger-CLI😔
FAQ
Why another plain text accounting tool?
Existing accounting tools are historically based on the notion of an account. You add money (debit) and you remove money (credit). (If this sounds backwards to you, read this explanation)
For example you get 50 € from your mum and buy some food for 20 €.
Account | Debit | Credit
--------|---------|--------
Wallet | 50.00 € |
Wallet | | 20.00 €
---------------------------
Simple, but also incomplete. Where did the money come from, where did it go? This led to double entry bookkeeping. Whenever you add some money to an account, you have to remove the same amount from another.
Account | Debit | Credit
--------|---------|--------
Wallet | 50.00 € |
Mum | | 50.00 €
Wallet | | 20.00 €
Food | 20.00 € |
---------------------------
But you must never forget a posting, because otherwise your account won't balance.
Account | Debit | Credit
--------|---------|--------
Wallet | 50.00 € |
Mum | | 50.00 €
Wallet | | 20.00 €
---------------------------
Oops, where did the money go? 🤷
If this looks (and sounds) confusing or too complicated, you're not alone! It made sense in former times as this layout makes it easier to add up the amounts by hand, but not in times of computers.
So how can we simplify it? It's actually quite easy: We just have to model it in terms of transactions, and not accounts.
Amount | From | To
-------|--------|--------
50 € | Mum | Wallet
20 € | Wallet | Food
-------------------------
- Simple - No more confusing debit / credit / asset / liability mumbo jumbo
- Intuitive - Just like you would talk about it
- Safe - It's obvious if you forget to fill out a field
Together with some further changes it yields an easier to understand, more robust and more complete representation of accounting!
Why is it written in PureScript?
PureScript leverages strong static typing and can therefore give more guarantees about the functionality of the code than weakly typed or untyped languages (like JavaScript).
You wouldn't want your money to get lost in rounding errors or
be turned to undefined
, would you?
Why is it not written in Haskell?
PureScript can also easily be used in the browser or get deployed as a cloud function as it simply compiles to JavaScript. With Haskell you'd have to use another language for a web frontend or quarrel with experimental stuff like GHCJS.
Comparison with Hledger
(H)ledger's transactions are a (balanced) group of account postings. Transity's transactions are a group of transfers between two accounts.
Syntax
Checkout the files hledger.journal and journal.yaml for similar transactions modeled in Hledger and in Transity.
There is a lot of ambiguity in the ledger journal format. Are you able to tell the difference between the 2 options?
2019-01-17 Bought food
expenses:food $10
assets:cash
; vs
2019-01-17 Bought food
assets:cash
expenses:food $10
Also, it lacks some fields for more precise recording of which parties where involved.
- What food?
- Where did you buy it?
- Which supermarket?
2019-01-17 Bought food
expenses:food $10
assets:cash
Reporting
hledger --file examples/hledger.journal balance
# vs
transity balance examples/journal.yaml
hledger --file examples/hledger.journal register
# vs
transity transactions examples/journal.yaml
hledger --file examples/hledger.journal register --output-format=csv
# vs
transity entries examples/journal.yaml
Missing features
- No support for precise timestamps (transactions only have an associated date)
- No first class support for Gnuplot (Check out Report Scripts for Ledger CLI with Gnuplot for some scripts)
Performance
Measured with hyperfine including 3 warmups on an early 2015 MacBook Pro.
For a journal file with around 2000 entries:
Transity:
Benchmark #1: transity balance journals/main.yaml
Time (mean ± σ): 1.287 s ± 0.021 s [User: 1.790 s, System: 0.140 s]
Range (min … max): 1.250 s … 1.324 s 10 runs
Hledger:
Benchmark #1: hledger -f test.ledger balance
Time (mean ± σ): 409.6 ms ± 6.1 ms [User: 366.6 ms, System: 28.5 ms]
Range (min … max): 398.8 ms … 417.6 ms 10 runs
Ledger:
Benchmark #1: ledger -f test.ledger balance
Time (mean ± σ): 76.3 ms ± 9.1 ms [User: 62.7 ms, System: 9.4 ms]
Range (min … max): 65.1 ms … 101.8 ms 28 runs
Ideas
Entry / Value Date
There are no separate fields for entry or value dates necessary. Simply use ISO 8601 time intervals to specify the duration of a transfer.
transactions:
- id: '123456789'
note: Deposit of savings
transfers:
- utc: 2018-01-04T12:00--05T22:10
from: john
to: bank
amount: 100 €
Syntax
This is a first concept for an alternative syntax for the YAML journal file:
2016-04-16 18:50:28
#20135604
1 year registration of domain "example.org"
john -> paypal : 9.95 €
paypal -> namecheap : 10.69 $
paypal -> icann : 0.18 $
namecheap -> john : 1 Domain
Related
- plaintextaccounting.org - Best of plain text accounting.
- cs007.blog - Personal finance for engineers.
- principlesofaccounting.com - Online tutorial on accounting.
- npoacct.sfconservancy.org - Effort to create accounting software for non-profit organizations.
- github.com/nuex/t - sh script for working with ledger timelog files.
- github.com/bankscrap/bankscrap - Ruby gem to extract balance and transactions from multiple banks.
- github.com/prashants/webzash - Easy to use web based double entry accounting software.