On 2024-01-21 17:04, Myron A Schroeder wrote:
> when I used the icon to
> call up GNUCash, the data file was vacant. A search on the the hard drive
> found it and the data was displayed as usual. Neat.
Or, in the File menu, click one of the recently-used files in the
numbered list.
Stan Brown
Teh
Thank you Micheal and David for your clear answers.
I tried the addition of –nofile to the icon. The first time it did nothing
and when I looked at the properties I saw the nofile was not saved. On the
second trial I clicked the Apply, then Continue and when I used the icon to
call up GNUCash, th
Myron
The same strategy can be used to create additional icons which open GnuCash
with a specific datafile. Copy the icons as
Michael suggested (one for each datafile) and edit them put in a URI to the
specific datafile instead of the --nofile
option. Give it a name reflecting that it opens tha
On 1/21/2024 11:05 AM, Myron A Schroeder wrote:
Where do I find the " --nofile runtime parameter."
Looks like an interesting way to have more than one set of books on my
computer.
What operating system are you using? Perhaps as much to the point, if
you are getting to gnucash by a "shortcut" (
Dear all,
Thanks for your answers.
Maybe, it was not clear, I have not requested the stopping of x86 support.
I have requested the build for x64 in more (like other softwares).
64-bit processor exists since 1991:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/64-bit_computing
The first official Windows x64 wa
And on MacOS, you have to use the full path into the app package, so
assuming you installed in the system Applications directory:
/Applications/Gnucash.app/Contents/MacOS/Gnucash --nofile
would be the full command.
Regards,
Adrien
On 1/21/24 10:17 AM, Fred Tydeman wrote:
On Linux, on the com
Michael, that is generally true and I'll hazard specifically true with
respect to XML files. But MS does have some things they refuse to let
you open with browsers other than Edge. It is a source of contention in
the tech world and there are plenty of blogs and articles about it. As
far as I am
The --nofile parameter is fine as you are commanding GnuCash "Do not load the
last file opened."
There is another option, which is to command GnuCash to open a specific file.
The command line structure is: gnucash [options] [datafile]
So if you add the datafile, GnuCash will open with that set
On Linux, on the command line:
gnucash --nofile
On Sun, Jan 21, 2024 at 8:06 AM Myron A Schroeder wrote:
> Where do I find the " --nofile runtime parameter."
>
>
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Where do I find the " --nofile runtime parameter."
Looks like an interesting way to have more than one set of books on my
computer.
Thanks for your help.
Myron Schroeder
On Fri, Jan 19, 2024 at 11:42 AM Gyle McCollam wrote:
> The quick and dirty solution is to save a copy of what you send to
On 1/20/2024 7:24 PM, Geoff wrote:
Conjecture - Edge is also the default app for opening XML files on
Windows?
Repeating the import in debug mode, the trace file contains lots of
information, no obvious (to me) error messages, and no mention of Edge:
https://bugs.gnucash.org/attachment.cgi?i
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