# Transactions with multiple destinations

Sometimes you need to split a payment across multiple destinations. For example:

• You charged VAT on an order, and so you need to split off a percentage of a payment into a dedicated VAT account.
• You have a marketplace, and a customer has made a single purchase of items from multiple vendors.
• Your game players need to split the loot from a group raid.
First time working through a Numscript guide?

Make sure that you're set up properly: Read through the prerequisites first!. Otherwise the examples below won't work.

## Basic transaction splitting​

Since we're in the game land of Cones Dunshire, let's consider that last case. As the ledgerman, we want a map of a coastal region, and we're willing to pay 75 coins to someone to get it done. leslieknope and annperkins, a group of two surveyors working together, rise to the task, and create that map. Now, we want to split the reward between them.

We can describe the transaction using Numscript. Create a file called split.num with:

And run it with

fctl ledger transactions num split.num
caution

Are you seeing

FATA[0000] account had insufficient funds

in your output? The source accounts need to have enough funds before you run this example. Make sure you're set up properly.

Once you've run that transaction succesfully, let's have a look at leslieknope's balance:

You should be able to see, as in the image above, that leslieknope received 38 coins, and annperkins received 37 coins.

### What's going on here?​

First, we're sending half of the 75 coin payment to leslieknope. Notice that 75, being an odd number, doesn't split evenly in half. Numscript is smart about this, and rounds amounts in a way that avoids rounding errors. Because leslieknope is listed first, they will get the coin that remains after evenly subdividing: They will receive 38 coin.

Formance Ledger uses integer math

Floating point numbers are too imprecise for finance. Numscript avoids this problem by only using integer math for dividing payments up. The reference docs have more detail on about Numscript's rounding algorithm.

Second, we're avoiding mistakes in our own calculations by telling Numscript to send whatever remains to annperkins, after leslieknope gets their share, by using the remaining keyword. Since leslieknope received 38 coin, that leaves 37 coin to distribute to annperkins.

## Nested transaction splitting.​

Let's take the previous scenario, and add a twist. Let's suppose we need to withhold taxes from the payment—Dunshire imposes a flat 15% sales tax for goods and services. We could modify split.num to reflect a three-way transaction:

But there is a problem: Scripting the transaction this way requires us to manually do the math to figure out that leslieknope should get 42.5% of the transaction (which we've had to round up).

There's a better way: Nested destinations. Using nested destinations allows us to be clearer about our intent, and leaves much of the math off to Numscript to sort out:

caution

Are you seeing

FATA[0000] account had insufficient funds

in your output? The source accounts need to have enough funds before you run this example. Make sure you're set up properly.

Run this script, and then look at leslieknope's balance.

You can see that Numscript has worked out all of necessary calculations so that the entire payment is allocated correctly to all destinations, with no remainder.

## Going further​

Numscript offers several different mechanisms for indicating how a transaction should be split among different destinations, this guide has just been a small taste of what's possible.

Dig deeper

Want to learn more about all the different ways to split a transaction? The reference docs have you covered!