On Fri, 10 Aug 2018 10:21:34 -0500
Bridgit Griffin wrote:
> For sanity's sake I imported the Quicken file into another financial
> program and the results were similar to what is in Quicken. There
> were many many more accounts that are closed (aka zeroed balances)
> that GNUcash was reporting d
Bridgit,
The hidden feature in GnuCash simply means that the account will not be
visible in the Account Tree (and any popup selection menus ? - see below),
not that the account is inactive, and not in use at all and is effectively
removed from the account tree.
A hidden account can still have tra
For sanity's sake I imported the Quicken file into another financial
program and the results were similar to what is in Quicken. There were
many many more accounts that are closed (aka zeroed balances) that
GNUcash was reporting differently. And if the account had a balance when
I selected clos
> On Aug 10, 2018, at 8:43 AM, Bridgit Griffin wrote:
>
> It’s a nice way to handle joint accounts that are no longer joint yet open.
If you control those funds, certainly you wouldn’t want to hide them.
If you don’t control the funds, as noted, you should zero and then hide the
account as th
Bridgit Griffin writes:
> It's a nice way to handle joint accounts that are no longer joint yet open.
> Also, for handling very old accounts not reconciled that are closed. Plus
> during the import process from Quicken lots of transactions were removed
> from accounts. For example, anything that
If they are accounts that no longer have any value (monetarily I mean) but
when you look at the account it says it has a value then your accounts are
in error. Add a transaction to bring the value to zero.
Colin
On Fri, 10 Aug 2018 at 14:43, Bridgit Griffin
wrote:
> It's a nice way to handle j
It's a nice way to handle joint accounts that are no longer joint yet open.
Also, for handling very old accounts not reconciled that are closed. Plus
during the import process from Quicken lots of transactions were removed
from accounts. For example, anything that says cash or salary. As you all
kn
Sounds like a bug or mis-feature in quicken to me. I think I'd prefer that my
accounts package didn't hide money from me.
Seriously, though thinking about it for a second, what financial institution
would allow you to close an account you held with them and leave a running
balance for the rest
No not all have zero balances. However, Quicken allows the account to be
treated as if that is the case. It seems the hidden function in GNUcash
doesn't function the same way.
On Fri, Aug 10, 2018, 4:30 AM Colin Law wrote:
> I would have expected a closed account to have a zero balance.
>
> Coli
I would have expected a closed account to have a zero balance.
Colin
On Fri, 10 Aug 2018 at 09:51, Bridgit Griffin
wrote:
> I recently imported 20 years of financial data. The issue I'm facing is
> that marking an account as hidden doesn't remove the balance from the
> total of the higher level
I recently imported 20 years of financial data. The issue I'm facing is
that marking an account as hidden doesn't remove the balance from the
total of the higher level accounts. Such that only active (unhidden)
accounts are reflected in totals. Being accustom to Quicken that did
have this featu
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