I have used it a bit for quite a while. As long as you don’t mind exporting a qif file from iQIF and then importing to gnucash, it works great. It will import a list of accounts exported from gnucash. Though my spending tracking on the go uses many fewer accounts than my desktop gnucash file, so I tend to use quicker account names on my phone and then let gnucash maintain a cross reference account equivalent on imports. It does allow split transactions.
When I’m near home, I tend to enter transactions from receipts when I get home. When I’m traveling, I tend to use BizXpenseTracker Pro. It’s much more involved and capable (and more expensive — subscription), but I really like its project-based logging. Transferring to gnucash is via QIF export-import. Its biggest drawback is that it doesn’t appear to allow split transactions. -- Dave Reiser dbrei...@icloud.com > On Nov 7, 2024, at 14:47, Freddie Venezia <fvene...@bellsouth.net> wrote: > > I found another App in the App Store called iQIF that claims to work with > GnuCash. It received 4.1 of 5 stars. Has anyone tried iQIF? > > FreddieVee > > > On 11/7/2024 2:28 PM, Freddie Venezia wrote: >> Is GnuCash available as an app for iPhones that actually works? At the App >> Store there is "GnuCash Mobile", but it it received 2.6 stars out of 5. The >> developer was Nick Tyler. Has anyone tried it?? >> >> FreddieVee >> >> >> _______________________________________________ gnucash-user mailing list gnucash-user@gnucash.org To update your subscription preferences or to unsubscribe: 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.