That makes sense. Thanks.
Will
On 21 Oct 2024, at 15:42, sunfis...@yahoo.com wrote:
But not after you've imported them. You assign them during import, and that's
when it learns.
David T.
On Oct 22, 2024, at 12:18 AM, Derek Atkins mailto:de...@ihtfp.com>> wrote:
>
> Theoretically you can "tra
But not after you've imported them. You assign them during import, and that's
when it learns.
David T.
On Oct 22, 2024, 12:18 AM, at 12:18 AM, Derek Atkins wrote:
>Theoretically you can "train" it...
>-derek
>
>On Mon, October 21, 2024 4:54 pm, William Prescott wrote:
>> I used a .qfx file.
Theoretically you can "train" it...
-derek
On Mon, October 21, 2024 4:54 pm, William Prescott wrote:
> I used a .qfx file. It didn't occur to me to right-click on them and I
> didn't see that in my short perusal of the documentation. I always try
> things first, then read the documentation later o
I used a .qfx file. It didn't occur to me to right-click on them and I didn't
see that in my short perusal of the documentation. I always try things first,
then read the documentation later or not at all. Sometimes that bites me.
Will it remember assignments next time?
Best wishes,
Will
On 21
Which import mechanism did you use?
For QIF, there is a mapper from QIF Account and Payee/Memo to target
Income/Expense account.
For OFX and CSV, the importer has a way to assign them, but you need to
right-click on each line to assign the account.
-derek
On Mon, October 21, 2024 4:25 pm, William
I have used Gnucash since 2011-01-01. I had never used the import function
until this past weekend. I always made all the entries manually. But I recently
realized that my bank allows downloading transactions in qfx format and I
decided to try it.
It was a good time to do so. I recently returne