Hi,
I have a setup similar to yours. gnucash folder is on Dropbox. I can
only have gnucash open on one machine at a time. Otherwise it complains
about the lock file. But if I only have it open on one machine, all is
well.
Not sure this will help...
Bob Crochelt
On 7/22/21 7:54 PM, David
The QFX importer gives you a chance to edit each transaction individually,
'training' it to select the desired account and whether to accept the
cleared date at teh bank or choose a different date, or, importantly, to
discard mis-matches to existing transactions. While the process is tedious
at fi
Hi Bruce, the headline news is that your suggestion fixed the issue - see
gnu.png - very many thanks to you (and Chris and Geoff) for your help,
expertise and patience.
Here's the detail:
a) Running cpan> force install IO::Handle made no difference.
b) Reinstalling Strawberry Perl appeared to
On 7/23/21 1:41 AM, david.rom...@davidjromano.com wrote:
Hi Bruce, the headline news is that your suggestion fixed the issue -
see gnu.png - very many thanks to you (and Chris and Geoff) for your
help, expertise and patience.
Not a problem, glad I could be of assistance. If you previously sent
Hi,
I'm exporting my transactions as CSV for processing by another program (awk -
but that's not really relevant). Large numbers in the exported CSV have commas
in them, like this:
"20,000"
In theory the quotes protect the comma from being considered a separator. But
in practice it's hard to
I've solved my own question. In gawk at least, one can delineate fields by what
they contain as opposed to what they are separated by. So what one does is set
the FPAT variable as this:
FPAT = "([^,]*)|(\"[^\"]*\")";
Then awk will recognise a field which looks like this "20,000" as a single
fi
You could have also picked a different field separator eg Semicolon (;)
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