Derek Atkins wrote > Your best bet may be to create a QIF file that contains the transactions > you want and then import that file.
This is essentially what I resorted to. Since gnucash does not support export to anything but a CSV file, I wrote a shell script to extract information from the gnucash xml file and output to a GIF file. As a shell script, it was slow as molasses running on a file with 500K transactions, but it got the job done. -- View this message in context: http://gnucash.1415818.n4.nabble.com/Copying-many-transactions-tp4692519p4692690.html Sent from the GnuCash - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com. _______________________________________________ gnucash-user mailing list gnucash-user@gnucash.org https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-user ----- Please remember to CC this list on all your replies. You can do this by using Reply-To-List or Reply-All.