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shoy

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shoy
·8 miesięcy temu·discuss
Manually, using Omnigraffle. It's not text-driven like Mermaid or Typst. I made a list of all the commands in the docs, grouped them by similarity and then created tables in Omnigraffle. OG has a very cool scale-text-and-graphics feature that allowed the boxes to re-size nicely on the page.

I learned a lot doing it, and thought others would find it useful.

So, there's no source to share, other than the OG file. It seems I have some options: 1) update it myself, or 2) let others make another (utensil has started one using Typst; it's at https://github.com/utensil/helix-cheat-sheet).

I always appreciate the work of others to make useful things, and wanted to give something back, no matter how small. Given my other commitments it will take me about a month or so to bring it up to date.

stappersg opened an issue in the repo (https://github.com/stevenhoy/helix-cheat-sheet/issues/1) - Ill post this comment there and ask for feedback.
shoy
·9 miesięcy temu·discuss
I'm glad you liked it. I keep meaning to update it (work and life get in the way), if the demand is there.

(edited for grammar)
shoy
·9 miesięcy temu·discuss
A while ago I made a dense cheat sheet for Helix. It's a touch out of date, but still possibly useful. https://github.com/stevenhoy/helix-cheat-sheet
shoy
·3 lata temu·discuss
Accountants use jargon in the same way that programmers do - to succinctly express commonly known and understood concepts. They do not use 'hard words'; if the words are 'hard' it's because the reader lacks the domain knowledge that accountants have been trained in.

The fact is that double-entry bookkeeping does not use negative numbers. Where confusion might arise is in the meaning of 'debit' and 'credit'.

'Debit' only means 'the left hand side', and 'credit' only means 'the right hand side'.

A debit is not a subtraction operation, nor is a credit addition. I suspect this mis-conception mostly arises because that's how it looks when a Bank 'credits' your account with your deposit - in fact it's increasing its liabilities (it owes you the money) which is recorded as an entry in the right-hand side of the liability column.

edit: typo
shoy
·3 lata temu·discuss
Don't sweat it, man. Stay loose.