On Sat, 2002-03-09 at 18:47, David Roundy wrote: > On Sat, Mar 09, 2002 at 02:51:30PM -0600, Alex Malinovich wrote: > > > > Personally, I would very much prefer to keep my system as free as > > possible. I'd much prefer to use gnucash over some other alternative, > > but so far I've found it severely lacking in one area, and that's > > importing bank statements via QIF. I use my Discover and American > > Express cards quite a bit, and entering each of those transactions into > > gnucash by hand would get very tedious very quickly. Other than that, I > > love gnucash. Unfortunately, for me at least, that's reason enough to > > start looking elsewhere. > > I have a question about this. I've just started using gnucash, so I > haven't gotten to the point of importing my bank statements (since it > hasn't been a month yet), but it seems like it has a working import > function (I tried it on an old month, but didn't actually do it, since it > would have confused things). > > I've heard before that gnucash has problems when you import your monthly > statements, but never understood what that problem is. Can you explain > this for me? I'd rather know what I'm up against when I get my bank > statements next month... > --
I am probably not the best person to answer this since I haven't actually done it myself, but I know people who are able to import quicken files. They just need to be in the right format, or something. Thry got all he needed from the gnucash site: http://www.gnucash.org/ Jamie -- Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] GPG/PGP ID: 26384A3A Fingerprint: D9FF DF4A 2D46 A353 A289 E8F5 AA75 DCBE 2638 4A3A
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