> On Feb 14, 2025, at 19:58, Bo Buckley wrote:
>
> In all examples I've seen so far with regards to the handling of foreign
> currencies the user is physically moving money from one currency to another
> (e.g. an online transfer) where an actual exchange occurs. What about the
> case where user
David H and Sunfish62, you are my new best friends! That problem must have
been dealt with in a previous update! The good ole double click, just like
Excel!
Thank you! po
On Sat, Feb 15, 2025 at 1:53 AM sunfis...@yahoo.com
wrote:
> For the record, you can also double click the Description co
What about the
case where users have to do reports for different countries in their own
respective currency (e.g. Japan in JPY and US in USD). I must report all
income in both Japan and the US (thanks IRS!) so I need a way to convert my
books between USD and JPY.
Folks, Bo is describing a p
A caveat.
John Ralls wrote ' ... If you need that you’ll have to turn off trading
accounts in File>Properties and manage the trading accounts and splits
manually.'
It seems I needed to do this too, as when I enter a purchase in euros into
a euro account that is paid for with GBP, it alters all th
I had this happen recently. It was caused by the order of deposits /
withdrawals in my cash account on the same day.
I excluded that account from the report and it worked ok.
On Thu, Feb 13, 2025 at 11:47 PM Kalpesh Patel
wrote:
> I am running Advance Portfolio report and I noticed it display
I have tried the QIF export file from Quicken 2016 to import to GNUcash V5.10
on WIndows 10.
It imports the accounts, but not the transactions.
Thanks for any help
* 17:35:01 WARN Could not locate file AUTHORS
* 17:35:01 WARN Could not locate file DOCUMENTERS
* 17:35:01 WARN Could not l
I had the same issue as there's a bug with imports on 5.10. I had to i the
import into GnuCash on my wife's Linux laptop, then copy the main file over
onto my W10 PC. GnuCash was happy loading it.
On 15 February 2025 13:56:01 GMT, Wendy Verbeek wrote:
>I have tried the QIF export file from Quic
Bo,
For this discussion I’m using the term trading gains to refer to both gains and
losses and booking both (as credits and debits respectively) into an income
account.
As you say, the income occurs when you go the other way. Leaving off trading
accounts for a moment, if you transfer $100 to J