It’s a wiki. Create an account and make the edits.
Regards,
Adrien
> On May 7, 2019, at 12:04 PM, Cricket Onebit
> wrote:
>
> Can someone edit that page in the wiki? It would help new users a lot.
>
> On Mon, 29 Apr 2019 at 17:00, David Carlson
> wrote:
>
_
Can someone edit that page in the wiki? It would help new users a lot.
On Mon, 29 Apr 2019 at 17:00, David Carlson
wrote:
> The wiki that David Cousins pointed you to does not mention the fact that
> GnuCash can only find duplicates to transactions that already exist in the
> data. Thus to avoi
Priit,
When I migrated over, I did it the same way as you describe here-- that is, I
imported the entire file in one pass. I went back to quicken numerous times to
clean up the exported data, but eventually got an import that was clean enough.
I offer that simply as a counter story to that of t
Hi Priit
I hope the import was successful. The hard part is now going thyrough and
checking and correcting the errors that have crept in. David Carlson's
comment re the handling of duplicate transactions is in aprt why small batch
imports are generally recommended and processing one account at a t
Good, thanks! I'll try a new import by account.
Best Regards,
Priit
Kontakt David Carlson () kirjutas kuupäeval E,
29. aprill 2019 kell 23:57:
> The wiki that David Cousins pointed you to does not mention the fact that
> GnuCash can only find duplicates to transactions that already exist in the
The wiki that David Cousins pointed you to does not mention the fact that
GnuCash can only find duplicates to transactions that already exist in the
data. Thus to avoid duplicates it is best to import one account at a time
and to use use the GnuCash transaction matching feature to identify
duplica
Hi David C!
Thank You, I have read the Quicken migration page in Wiki and probably
followed it mostly except for splitting the import into smaller pieces. The
first try was importing all 18 years of data at once. It took some time but
generally succeeded. I'll try to import just a few accounts to
Hi David!
Well, I just made a full export from Quicken and then fed the big file to
GnuCash. Everything was done automatically and I had no control of the
sequence of import. Maybe I'll try the import by smaller chunks.
Best Regards,
Priit
Kontakt D via gnucash-user () kirjutas kuupäeval
L, 27.
Priit,
Are you following the suggestions on the following Wiki page
https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/Quicken_Migration.
David Cousens
-
David Cousens
--
Sent from: http://gnucash.1415818.n4.nabble.com/GnuCash-User-f1415819.html
___
gnucash-user mai
Priit,
I suspect you imported the transactions for Swedbank, and then imported ones
from LHV, correct?
When you do this, you must ensure that you take the time in the second import
to ensure that the transaction from Swedbank to LHV is matched to the
transaction from the first import. They ar
Hi,
I get duplicate transactions sometimes too. I tend to download data from
financial institutions and import it to GnuCash on a quarterly basis and
catch things up. The matcher does a pretty good job of assigning accounts
and so forth, but it's not perfect. I find I still have to survey its w
Greetings, dear GnuCash gurus! :)
I wonder if there is an answer to my problem with Quicken data import? I
have used Quicken 2000 Home & Business since year 2000 but recently I
discovered GnuCash as a cute and at the same time much more serious
alternative to this old Quicken ("serious" meaning mo
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