Skip navigation.

Announcement: GnuCash 2.0.0 Release

GnuCash
GnuCash

Accounting in Linux Leaps Forward
GnuCash 2.0.0 milestone released to public

Personal and small business accounting in Linux will be easier and better
after today's release of GnuCash 2.0.0.
This milestone release of the free, open source accounting program includes
generational advances over the last version. GnuCash 2.0.0 is based on
state-of-the-art gtk2 GUI technology. Developers worked hard to integrate the
Gnome Human Interface Guidelines (HIG) for a consistent behaviour and
look-and-feel for the whole Desktop.
Major changes in the milestone release include;

  • OFX DirectConnect which can directly retrieve and import account
    statements over the Internet.
  • A "Hide account" feature to keep a better overview of your current accounts
    tabbed window functionality.
  • The ability to create budgets within GnuCash using your account data.
  • Support for Accounting Periods.
  • The data file format has been improved with respect to international
    characters. Data files with international characters can be transferred to
    other countries flawlessly.
  • GnuCash Help and Guide are now fully integrated with the GNOME Help system
    (Yelp).

The GnuCash development team said these new features and changes will make
GnuCash easier than ever for newcomers.
GnuCash is the leading free, open source accounting program and the leap to gtk2
will enable users to be able to enjoy cutting edge functionality with the
freedom of not being locked into proprietory file formats.
Playing With Others
As with other leading Linux software that is designed to replace
proprietory programs, GnuCash is a functional
replacement for expensive accounting programs. Like OpenOffice.org and
The Gimp, GnuCash is also programmed to communicate and interact with as many
existing programs, institutions and people as possible.
The GnuCash development team has continued to improve file import filters,
which allow users to import work from old programs like Microsoft Money and
Quicken. GnuCash can load QIF and QFX files, which are used by both of those
programs.
Developers have also continued to incorporate support for online banking into
the program. GnuCash 2.0.0 supports OFX DirectConnect which can directly
retrieve and import account statements over the Internet.
The milestone release is available in 29 languages, including English,
French, German, Spanish, Norwegian, so people from around the world will have
no difficulty operating the program
Off on the Right Foot
Users of the GnuCash 2.0.0 will notice a few changes when they start the
program. Improvements have been made on startup speed, scheduled
transactions, currency support and currency quote retrievals.
After they enter the program, users will find a double-ledger account
system, exhaustive report options and account hierarchy tools. Also at their
disposal is a full system of tutorials and documentation.
Getting GnuCash
GnuCash 2.0.0 can be downloaded from gnucash.org. It is available as
source code.
To install GnuCash, users will need Gnome 2, guile, slib and
g-wrap.
http://www.gnucash.org
http://download.sourceforge.net/gnucash
About the Program
GnuCash is a free, open source accounting program released under the GNU
General Public License (GPL) and available for GNU/Linux, *BSD, Solaris and
Mac OSX. It is collaboratively developed by 10 people from over 5
countries.
Programming on GnuCash began in 1997, and its first stable release was in
1998.

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.
Come on guys by Anonymous George (not verified)

ACK

I agree: There should be an easy to use binary when publishing a major release such as this one. It doesn't matter whether a tarball with a custom ./install.sh included, or a combination of RPM/DEB as used by NERO Linux, or an Autopackage as used by Inkscape, as long as it runs on all major Linux distributions.

An Autopackage would be nice because its shell provides an overview of installed packages and a 'remove' option.

Whatever way a developer chooses, it would rock if people wouldn't be forced to waste their time learning compile stuff, or depend on their distribution to provide packages of wanted software.

Thank you!

Thanks for all the work! Congratulations on a job well done!

I started using GnuCash a couple years ago, and last year when I switched to the Mac I continued using it under Fink. It works, but I've always preferred the feel of GTK2 apps. I look forward to testing this out soon!

good news...

Good news everyone :)
And thanks to all gnucash developers. I'm looking forward to test it :)

Good Luck by Anonymous George (not verified)
not too fast! by Anonymous George (not verified)