Organize your finances from the command line
An application that helps you administering your daily expenses and earnings using single-entry book-keeping. Interact via the command line interface fina
.
The financeager
backend holds databases (internally referred to as 'pockets', stored in ~/.local/share/financeager
). A pocket contains entries for a certain project.
You might be someone who wants to organize finances with a simple software because you're tired of Excel and the like. And you like the command line. And Python.
financeager
requires Python 3.9 or higher (last version supporting Python 3.6/3.7/3.8 is 1.0.3/1.2.1/1.3.10).
pip install --user --upgrade financeager
If you have pipx
installed, install financeager
into an isolated environment via
pipx install financeager
You can use financeager
as a client-server or a serverless application (default). The user interacts via the command line interface (CLI).
Click here for background information about the modes.
The user request invoked from the CLI is passed to the backend which opens the appropriate database, processes the request, closes the database and returns a response. All communication happens within a single process, hence the label 'serverless'.
In vanilla financeager, this is the default mode.
You can explicitly specify it in the configuration file ~/.config/financeager/config
via
[SERVICE]
name = local
Install the financeager-flask plugin.
In any case, you're all set up! See the next section about the available client CLI commands and options.
The main CLI entry point is called fina
.
usage: fina [-h] [-V] {add,get,remove,update,copy,list,pockets} ...
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-V, --version display version info and exit
command
add add an entry to the database
get show information about single entry
remove remove an entry from the database
update update one or more fields of an entry
copy copy an entry from one pocket to another, or within one pocket
list list all entries in the pocket database
pockets list all pocket databases
Add earnings (no/positive sign) and expenses (negative sign) to the database:
> fina add burgers -19.99 --category Restaurants
> fina add lottery 123.45 --date 03-14
Category and date can be optionally specified. They default to None and the current day's date, resp. The program will try to derive the entry category from the database if not specified. If several matches are found, the default category is used.
The date format can be anything that the parser module of the
python-dateutil
library understands (e.g. YYYY-MM-DD, YY-MM-DD or MM-DD).
Add recurrent entries by specifying the frequency (yearly, half-yearly, quarterly, bi-monthly, monthly, weekly, daily) with the -f
flag and optionally start and end date with the -s
and -e
flags, resp.
> fina add rent -500 -f monthly -s 01-01 -c rent
By default, the start date is the current date. The entry exists for infinite times, i.e. the end date is evaluated as the current date at query runtime.
Did you make a mistake when adding a new entry? Update one or more fields by calling the update
command with the entry's ID and the respective corrected fields:
> fina update 1 --name "McKing Burgers" --value -18.59
To unset the end date of a recurrent entry, or the category of an entry, use a special indicator: --end -
and --category -
Remove an entry by specifying its ID (visible in the output of the list
command). This removes the burgers
entry:
> fina remove 1
This would remove the recurrent rent entries (ID is also 1 because standard and recurrent entries are stored in separate tables):
> fina remove 1 --recurrent
Show a side-by-side overview of earnings and expenses (filter by date/category/name/value by passing the --filter
option, e.g. --filter category=food
to show entries in the categories food
)
> fina list
Earnings | Expenses
Name Value Date ID | Name Value Date ID
Unspecified 123.45 | Rent 1500.00
Lottery 123.45 03-14 2 | Rent January 500.00 01-01 1
| Rent February 500.00 02-01 1
| Rent March 500.00 03-01 1
=============================================================================
Total 123.45 | Total 1500.00
Difference -1376.55
It might be convenient to list entries of the current month, or a specific month only (example output is omitted):
> fina list --month
> fina list --month January
> fina list --month Dec
> fina list --month 7
> fina list --month 03
In order to only list category entries incl. their respective percentage of earnings/expenses use
> fina list --category-percentage
In order to only list recurrent entries run (you can apply additional filtering (use -f end=
to list entries with indefinite end) and sorting)
> fina list --recurrent-only
The aforementioned fina
commands operate on the default database (main
) unless another pocket is specified by the --pocket
flag.
> fina add xmas-gifts -42 --date 12-23 --pocket personal
Copy an entry from one database to another by specifying entry ID and source/destination pocket:
> fina copy 1 --source 2017 --destination 2018
Detailed information is available from
> fina --help
> fina <subcommand> --help
You can turn on printing debug messages to the terminal using the --verbose
option, e.g.
> fina list --verbose
You can find a log of interactions at ~/.local/share/financeager/log
(on both the client machine and the server).
Besides specifying the backend to communicate with, you can also configure frontend options: the name of the default category (assigned when omitting the category option when e.g. adding an entry). The defaults are:
[FRONTEND]
default_category = unspecified
The CLI fina
tries to read the configuration from ~/.config/financeager/config
. You can specify a custom path by passing it along with the -C
/--config
command line option.
Command line tab completion is provided by the argcomplete
package (for bash; limited support for zsh, fish, tcsh). Completion should work for all commands and CLI options incl. selections for values of --category
, --table-name
, --pocket
, and --frequency
.
Completion has to be enabled by running activate-global-python-argcomplete
. Read the instructions if you want to know more.
Want to use a different database? Should be straightforward by deriving from Pocket
and implementing the _entry()
methods. Modify the Server
class accordingly to use the new pocket type. See also this issue.
The financeager
core package can be extended by Python plugins.
The supported groups are:
financeager.services
Available plugins are:
Click here for instructions about creating plugins.
For developing a plugin, create a plugin package containing a main.py
file:
from financeager import plugin
class _Configuration(plugin.PluginConfiguration):
"""Configuration actions specific to the plugin."""
and implement the required PluginConfiguration
methods.
Finally, specify the entry point for loading the plugin in setup.py
:
setup(
...,
entry_points={
<group_name>: <plugin-name> = <package>.main:main,
# e.g.
# "financeager.services": "fancy-service = fancy_service.main:main",
},
)
The plugin name can be different from the package name.
The package name should be prefixed with financeager-
.
For developing a service plugin, extend the aforementioned main.py
file:
# fancy_service/main.py in the fancy-service package
from financeager import plugin, clients
class _Configuration(plugin.PluginConfiguration):
"""Configuration actions specific to the plugin."""
class _Client(clients.Client):
"""Client to communicate with fancy-service."""
def main():
return plugin.ServicePlugin(
name="fancy-service",
config=_Configuration(),
client=_Client,
)
Provide a suitable client implementation.
Done! When the plugin is correctly installed, and configured to be used (name = fancy-service
), financeager
picks it up automatically. The plugin configuration is applied, and the plugin client created.
The following diagram sketches the relationship between financeager's modules. See the module docstrings for more information.
+--------+
| plugin |
+--------+
¦ ¦
V V
+--------+ +-----------+
| config |-->| cli |
+--------+ +-----------+
¦ Λ +---------+ +---------+
[pre-processing] ¦ ¦ [formatting] <-- | listing | <-- | entries |
V ¦ +---------+ +---------+
+-------------------------------------+
| clients |
+-------------------------------------+
¦ Λ
V ¦
+-------------------------------------+
| | FRONTEND
| |
| localserver | ==========
| |
| | BACKEND
+-------------------------------------+
¦ Λ
V ¦
+-------------------------------------+
| server |
+-------------------------------------+
¦ Λ
V ¦
+-------------------------------------+
| pocket |
+-------------------------------------+
Always welcome! Clone the repo
git clone https://github.com/pylipp/financeager
cd financeager
Create a virtual environment
python3 -m venv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate
Install development dependencies
make install
You're all set for hacking! Please adhere to test-driven development, if possible: When adding a feature, or fixing a bug, try to construct a test first, and subsequently adapt the implementation. Run the tests from the root directory via
make test
If you added a non-cosmetic change (i.e. a change in functionality, e.g. a bug fix or a new feature), please update Changelog.md
accordingly as well. Check this README whether the content is still up to date.
- Tag the latest commit on master by incrementing the current version accordingly (scheme
vmajor.minor.patch
). - Run
make release
. - The package is automatically published to PyPI using a Github action.
financeager
aims to be simple in functionality. A related command-line tool is expenses.
For more holistic management of your financial affairs you might consider double-entry book-keeping. The following projects provide mature support:
CLI-focused (GUI/browser extensions available):
TUI applications
Client-server applications
Local GUI applications