It should be no problem at all. Just record the original transactions you
already have recorded against something like a miscellaneous expenses
account. Add notes to the description that they were direct debits in error.
The refunds should also appear in your OFX records so just load then and use
Geert Janssens writes:
> li works because it represents an integral number.
> ld does not work because it represents a decimal number. Telling gnucash to
This isn't quite right. 'd' is still an integer value. The issue is
that some platforms use 'li' to represent long integers, and others use
On Wed, Jan 24, 2018 at 12:21 PM, Geert Janssens wrote:
> I think the file association feature is currently pretty basic, but useful.
>
> The most common complaints about the initial implementation were
> - the lack of an indication of whether a file was associated with it or not
> - a way to rem
On 24 January 2018 at 20:49, Mike Stillingfleet <
mikestillingfl...@fastmail.co.uk> wrote:
> Thank you Colin. That remedial action makes sense. I remain mystified as
> to how the name got changed. Verification of which file has all the right
> data in it isn't as simple as y sounds. I know the rec
Hi Bob,
Yeah I think from memory Win 8.1 has a start screen instead of the start
menu - it's been awhile :-) There are 3rd party addons out there to
restore the start menu if you want it.
How do you start gnucash without the Start Menu. When you installed
gnucash did you also tell it to install
Thank you Colin. That remedial action makes sense. I remain mystified as
to how the name got changed. Verification of which file has all the
right data in it isn't as simple as y sounds. I know the reconciliation
dates are right in the new file. But going back and checking thousands
of prior perio
On 24/01/18 11:26 AM, Geert Janssens wrote:
David,
Another thing to try is run gnucash from the command line (I believe this is
also possible on OS X, though I don't know the details).
Normally gnucash prints the version of F::Q it finds to the console during
startup. That may give a hint alre
David,
Another thing to try is run gnucash from the command line (I believe this is
also possible on OS X, though I don't know the details).
Normally gnucash prints the version of F::Q it finds to the console during
startup. That may give a hint already.
Geert
Op woensdag 24 januari 2018 04:
Op woensdag 24 januari 2018 08:54:03 CET schreef David T. via gnucash-user:
> Yes.
> https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=790789
>
>
>
> On Wed, Jan 24, 2018 at 11:37, David Carlson
> wrote: OK, I missed the reference. Has a bug been submitted?
>
> David C
>
> On Wed, Jan 24, 2018
David,
Op woensdag 24 januari 2018 04:01:23 CET schreef D via gnucash-user:
> Derek,
>
> I did edit the environment file.
>
As a sneak preview, with 3.0 this will become a thing of the past. Instead of
updating the environment file over and over, you will be creating an
"environment.local" fil
Op dinsdag 23 januari 2018 21:47:39 CET schreef David Carlson:
> Glad you were able to resolve your write issue. Why your AV is that
> sensitive, I am not sure. Did you have to whitelist all the other programs
> that you use regularly?
>
> Anyway, your comment about GnuCash doing unnecessary thi
Op maandag 22 januari 2018 17:30:32 CET schreef David T.:
> Geert,
>
> What is the current status on the File Association feature set? I know that
> there was a wave of activity a few years back when the feature was first
> added, but I haven’t seen anything about it since. My recollection of the
On 24 January 2018 at 13:57, Mike Stillingfleet <
mikestillingfl...@fastmail.co.uk> wrote:
> Dear All,
>
> I have just noticed (after doing a lot of work on GNU Cash) that the file
> name has changed. I now have a file call Bank Expenses.gnucash.
>
> When I click on file I see my old file name as
Hello Bob,
You're going to want to install perl. I use activeperl from activestate,
but there are others that work. Ensure perl.exe is in your path. Should
happen during install, but just check. Running 'perl -V' from the command
line should tell you if it's found.
Secondly, you'll want to r
Dear All,
I have just noticed (after doing a lot of work on GNU Cash) that the file name
has changed. I now have a file call Bank Expenses.gnucash.
When I click on file I see my old file name as "2" and the new file new as "1".
I didn't ever request a new file name.
Where did this new file
On 24 January 2018 at 10:31, David Goodenough <
david.goodeno...@linkchoose.co.uk> wrote:
> A community association for which I am treasurer for recently had someone
> succeed in
> getting our bank to open a Direct Debit on our account without our
> authorisation.
> They took 4 payments before we
A community association for which I am treasurer for recently had someone
succeed in
getting our bank to open a Direct Debit on our account without our
authorisation.
They took 4 payments before we noticed, and now the DD has been cancelled and
the
money refunded. We use GnuCash to manage t
I have recently installed Gnucash with import from my previous Quicken files. I
have not been able to find the Install Online Price Retrieval function to
enable online stock price retrieval. I am running windows 8.1 and do not find a
"Start Menu Gnucash Group". Windows 8.1 does not seem to have
18 matches
Mail list logo