Yes. In my GnuCash the original shares are removed in one transaction, and the 
newly calculated amount (based on the split) is added in a second transaction.

In my Quicken, when I recorded a split, the additional shares (in this case, a 
4 for 1 of APPL) were recorded. 

But my original question has more to do with what ratio I should put into the 
gif to properly record the split. What I’m getting to work is to multiply the 
ratio by 10 and that is what should be in the QIF.

For example, with Apple’s 4 for 1 split in 2020, the line in the QIF should be 
Q40.

> On Jan 5, 2023, at 19:24, Ken Farley <farle...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> When I was doing a bunch of Quicken conversions using QIF files, what 
> happened was pretty much what you described here, I think. My original shares 
> were removed in one transaction, while the split amount was added back. For 
> example, 200 shares that needed at 2 for 1 resulted in a 200 share removal 
> with a subsequent 400 share addition. Maybe this is how Quicken handled 
> splits "behind the scenes"?
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