Maxime Teissier
complete
Maxime Teissier
Dear voters,
Here is the list of Currencies that will be added next Tuesday:
- Baht (THB • ฿)
- Brazilian Real (BRL • R$)
- Chilean Peso (CLP • $)
- Colombian Peso (COP • $)
- Egyptian Pound (EGP • £)
- Forint (HUF • Ft)
- Hryvnia (UAH • ₴)
- Indian Rupee (INR • ₹)
- Kuwaiti Dinar (KWD • د.ك)
- Malaysian Ringgit (MYR • RM)
- Mexican Peso (MXN • $)
- New Zealand Dollar (NZD • $)
- Norwegian Krone (NOK • kr)
- Philippine Peso (PHP • ₱)
- Polish Złoty (PLN • zł)
- Rand (ZAR • R)
- Romanian Leu (RON • lei)
- Rupiah (IDR • Rp)
- Russian Ruble (RUB • ₽)
- Saudi Riyal (SAR • ﷼)
- Singapore Dollar (SGD • $)
- Swiss Franc (CHF • Fr)
- Turkish Lira (TRY • ₺)
- UAE Dirham (AED • د.إ)
- Won (KRW • ₩)
- Yen (JPY • ¥)
- Yuan Renminbi (CNY • ¥)
Maxime Teissier
in progress
Maxime Teissier
planned
Maxime Teissier
Merged in a post:
Request for Other Currencies in Budgets
F
Flamingo pink Parrot
I'm from Chile and none of the currency options in the budget work for me. I need the CLP Option or the $ symbol
Maxime Teissier
Merged in a post:
Estimate – Custom currency input for international users
X
Xenacious Porpoise
As a professional Magicplan user based in Switzerland, I rely on the Estimate module to create offers and technical documentation.
Currently, the system only supports five predefined currencies, which means many commonly used currencies are not available.
In my case, I need to work with Swiss Francs (CHF), but there is no option to define this within the platform.
I would very much appreciate the ability to either:
– add additional currencies such as CHF, or
– enable a custom currency input (user-defined label and symbol).
This feature would significantly improve Magicplan’s usability for professionals outside the default currency regions.
F
Flamingo pink Parrot
Hello MagicPlan Team! I have verified that the requested Chilean peso currency “CLP” or “$”, which was planned for early January, has not yet been implemented. I hope they can fix it soon. salutes
Maxime Teissier
under review
Maxime Teissier
Olive Ox well received! We will work on it and add a lot of new currencies! You'll get a notification!
F
Flamingo pink Parrot
Yes! CLP (Chilean Peso) = $ (Peso) are equivalent. The first notation is more specific, since it refers to the country's currency, while the second is more general and the one used in accounting records, invoices, etc. I would be more inclined to add CLP. Regards!
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