From 6d1d51fc365637109fceee591a47a8b534529a1d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "martin.holmer@gmail.com" Date: Fri, 8 Nov 2024 14:01:58 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] Update tcja_after_2025.md documentation --- docs/usage/tcja_after_2025.md | 15 ++------------- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 13 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/usage/tcja_after_2025.md b/docs/usage/tcja_after_2025.md index 346769235..8e8f573f0 100644 --- a/docs/usage/tcja_after_2025.md +++ b/docs/usage/tcja_after_2025.md @@ -86,23 +86,12 @@ To analyze your reform relative to a reform that extends all TCJA temporary provisions beyond 2025, you would execute this command: ``` -tc z.csv 2026 --exact --tables --baseline ext.json --reform x.json +tc z.csv 2026 --exact --tables --baseline ext.json --reform ext.json+x.json ``` -The tables would be in the `z-26-ext-x-#-tab.text` output file +The tables would be in the `z-26-ext-ext+x-#-tab.text` output file generated by this `tc` run. -Also, remember that you can simulate a _compound reform_ using the -following syntax: - -``` -tc z.csv 2026 --exact --tables --baseline ext.json --reform x.json+y.json -``` - -where `y.json` contains a reform with additional provisions not -included in your `x.json` reform file. The resulting table output -would be in a file named `z-26-ext-x+y-#-tab.text`. - And finally, you might consider creating a reform file called `end.json` that contains just the two characters `{}`. This is a null reform, which is equivalent to current-law policy, that could be used