Hey Elias,
I tried to do this recently as well, and with the helpful responses of
Geert and David, I think it is working. Like what you described, there
is rounding in my transaction histories from my financial institution,
and all I really want to get correct in gnucash is (i) the number of
share
Thanks Geert that makes me feel better, was starting to think I was going
crazy.
On Mon, May 11, 2020 at 4:15 AM Geert Janssens
wrote:
> Op woensdag 6 mei 2020 21:58:20 CEST schreef Elias K Gardner:
> > I'm importing csv transaction files for my 401(k). The transactions in
> > gnucash go from US
Op woensdag 6 mei 2020 21:58:20 CEST schreef Elias K Gardner:
> I'm importing csv transaction files for my 401(k). The transactions in
> gnucash go from USD in one account to stock in another. The csv file has
> the *quantity* of stock, the *price* of the stock in USD, and the *amount*
> of the tra
I'm importing csv transaction files for my 401(k). The transactions in
gnucash go from USD in one account to stock in another. The csv file has
the *quantity* of stock, the *price* of the stock in USD, and the *amount*
of the transaction in USD.
After importing any two of these gnucash will figure