Not particularly.
The issue is that 11/12 is ambiguous. Is it November 12 or December 11?
Using a 2-digit year doesn't help.
The best way is to ensure you have a day > 12 in the mix (and a year > 31).
So using 12/29/2022 should give you a unique format.
You cannot use month names, only numbers.
-derek
Sent using my mobile device. Please excuse any typos.
On December 29, 2022 14:35:09 m...@tgr66.me wrote:
I’m developing QIF files to import my old investments. I get asked every
time to confirm the date format (the entire import process is a bit long
imo). The QIF specification says I ought to be able to enter a date using
`dd month year`; for example: 29 December 2022. However, this results in an
error in GnuCash.
Is there a format I can use in the files that GnuCash will accurately
autodetect the correct format?
Thanks.
Tim
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