What is the name of your state? federal
Back when I did my tax manually, I was given the direction to enter zeros in fields that don't apply, because it makes it clear that the field was not overlooked. It makes sense, and I believe that was good advice.
However, now when I use TaxCut, the same convention causes problems. I entered zeros for fields that should be zero. One anomaly that results is TaxCut then fills in enumeration fields that are dependent on numerical fields, even when the number is a zero. This results in errors during the taxcut error check, forcing me to enumerate a pull-down selection on non-applicable fields. TaxCut will even attach entire forms that are not applicable, because it does not know when to treat a zero as N/A. Taxcut also leaves fields blank if the interview did not need to touch on a topic. This causes an ugly mix of blank fields and zeros, which gives the false appearance that the form is incomplete.
Okay, so I learned my lesson. Never enter a zero in Taxcut. TaxCut tech support told me to go back through the interview process, revisit every question, and change the zeros to blanks. They said this would clear all the zeros so fields are either non-zero, or blank. Well it didn't work. It cleared some of the zeros, but there are still many residual.
Should I submit these forms as they are? Or should I click the override box for every zero, and forcefully make the field blank?
Back when I did my tax manually, I was given the direction to enter zeros in fields that don't apply, because it makes it clear that the field was not overlooked. It makes sense, and I believe that was good advice.
However, now when I use TaxCut, the same convention causes problems. I entered zeros for fields that should be zero. One anomaly that results is TaxCut then fills in enumeration fields that are dependent on numerical fields, even when the number is a zero. This results in errors during the taxcut error check, forcing me to enumerate a pull-down selection on non-applicable fields. TaxCut will even attach entire forms that are not applicable, because it does not know when to treat a zero as N/A. Taxcut also leaves fields blank if the interview did not need to touch on a topic. This causes an ugly mix of blank fields and zeros, which gives the false appearance that the form is incomplete.
Okay, so I learned my lesson. Never enter a zero in Taxcut. TaxCut tech support told me to go back through the interview process, revisit every question, and change the zeros to blanks. They said this would clear all the zeros so fields are either non-zero, or blank. Well it didn't work. It cleared some of the zeros, but there are still many residual.
Should I submit these forms as they are? Or should I click the override box for every zero, and forcefully make the field blank?