This is also my plan. I'm working on a cross reference plan before I try
to import anything. I have a Quicken data file with complete
transactions for all bank accounts, credit cards, and loans since Jan 1
1990. I want to get it all into gnucash so I can archive the entire
quicken system, but still be able to research the entire period. I'm
setting up chart of account pre-import to include many banks and cards
with closed accounts. Probably 80% of the accounts in the file are
closed.
Joe
On 2017-12-24 20:23, D via gnucash-user wrote:
Gnucash creates the accounts because you and the transactions used
those accounts. Personally, I prefer having all that "clutter," since
it represents what happened. Accounting is supposed to track what
happened, after all.
Two points: first, you can hide accounts in the Chart of Accounts,
which would allow these accounts to exist without disturbing your
daily accounting work. Second, you can delete accounts, if that really
is your goal; when you delete an account with transactions in it, you
get a chance to move them all to an account of your choosing. (I
propose that this would be easier than editing the QIF, as another
suggests).
Personally, I'd keep the transactions and hide the accounts.
David
On December 25, 2017, at 5:47 AM, cliffhan...@gardener.com wrote:
Thanks. Yes one can import one at a time but this cheque ac from
Quicken is huge and has references to other card accounts as
categories
within it. These accounts don't exist anymore and gnucash is trying
to
create them as part of the import. This is something I'd like to
avoid.
Hope this makes sense. Cliff
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: Dealing with a large QIF file
From: Colin Law
To: Cliff McDiarmid
CC: gnucash-user@gnucash.org
You should be able to export one account at a time from Quicken, I
think. Then import them one at a time.
Colin
On 24 December 2017 at 19:02, Cliff McDiarmid wrote:
> Hi
>
> I'm importing a large QIF file(a current a/c)about 6000 entries.
> There are about a dozen other a/c's from Quicken, now closed,
> associated with this large file. When importing, Gnucash seems
to
> want to create these defunct a/c's to 'balance the books'. I
assume
> there isn't any way of avoiding this. The whole thing looks like
it
> will be horrendous. I've imported some small credit card a/c's
already
> with success, but they were not any of these other closed
accounts.
>
> Any advice please.
> thanks
>
> Cliff
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