But THESE are done differently in standard double entry bookkeeping.
- allow me to assign a category to each transaction.
- create categories (or import quicken categories) and assign each as tax
deductible or not.
You will be creating ACCOUNTS and these can be in a hierarchy. Thus under the ac
Others will likely help you get going on things like downloading bank
transactions and the other things. As far as bringing Quicken data over
to Gnucash, I did a big block of that a little over a year ago, because
I wanted to have all the history available. Here's a regurgitation of a
long mess
I would also add that the ability to download from your bank is VERY
dependent on the bank's support of non-Quicken downloads. My banks, for
example, no longer allow OFX (I'm in the US) downloads unless it's Quicken.
The good news is you can test all of this out in parallel before you
make your d
Hi Fred
At a guess I think the problem is the square brackets "[]" surrounding
the Account Names - try removing them.
This:
> L[Expenses:fees]
Should be:
> LExpenses:fees
Regards
Geoff
=
On 7/01/2024 2:01 pm, Fred Tydeman wrote:
Running GC 4.14 on Linux
During an import of a QIF file
Indeed. QIF treats the L[XX] as Asset/Liability account and LXX as an
Income/Expense account (Category).
-derek
On Sun, January 7, 2024 6:53 pm, Geoff wrote:
> Hi Fred
>
> At a guess I think the problem is the square brackets "[]" surrounding
> the Account Names - try removing them.
>
> This:
>
Thank you.
Is that documented somewhere in Gnucash?
On Sun, Jan 7, 2024 at 4:02 PM Derek Atkins wrote:
> Indeed. QIF treats the L[XX] as Asset/Liability account and LXX as an
> Income/Expense account (Category).
> -derek
>
>
___
gnucash-user mailing
This isn't a GnuCash thing. It's a QIf thing.
-derek
Sent using my mobile device. Please excuse any typos.
On January 7, 2024 19:58:30 Fred Tydeman wrote:
Thank you.
Is that documented somewhere in Gnucash?
On Sun, Jan 7, 2024 at 4:02 PM Derek Atkins wrote:
Indeed. QIF treats the L[XX] as As
Do any gnu-cash user groups meet in person? I'd like to meet and perhaps
occasionally work with other gnu-cash users.
If no groups exist, but any of you might care to meet with another user,
please direct reply.
I live in central Connecticut and would be happy to host a group.
I travel occasi
Amusingly I happen to be in Shelton for the next couple days...
-derek
On Sun, January 7, 2024 9:28 pm, Steve Freeman wrote:
> Do any gnu-cash user groups meet in person? I'd like to meet and perhaps
> occasionally work with other gnu-cash users.
>
> If no groups exist, but any of you might care
Wikipedia has a confusing explanation here:
When editing the QIF file, check for any transaction Category (the field
starting with 'L') for an account name contained in brackets, such as
[Checking Account]. The brackets reference another quicken account, and
if left in place will post a transa
The problem with that Wikipedia article is that it focuses solely on Quicken,
but the QIF format has essentially become an open format that other
applications use (and implement).
Since that article doesn't mention the designation of bracketed accounts as
fitting in any particular category, it
In order to have tax report GNUCASH offers some options
1. If you are from USA, you can use GNUCASH inbuilt tax report
2. For non usa users, there are few work around, which i have adopted
A. Create income account and in its name add suffix taxable
Or
B. While posting income add "tax" in descr
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