Hello,

Le 23/04/2024 à 23:48, David Carlson a écrit :
Sir,

In my experience most financial institutions that offer QIF exports also offer OFX format which will often go under a similar name.

Alas, a hundred times alas, not always. Not in France, at least. They should…

I was able, however, to use <https://github.com/georggrab/qif2ofx>. I had to reverse all transactions (which is easier to do in the QIF, btw) because my bank seems to directly produce a QIF for my point of view while GnuCash seems to expect a QIF with transactions from the bank's point of view, but that is another story.


If you need the QIF format then you will probably be stuck either waiting for the 5.7 windows release or reverting either to an earlier 5 series or maybe even 4 series if you have an older Linux based machine as I do.

Even though the Gnucash team has been releasing new versions at a steady and formidable rythm of one every 3 to 4 months, that still makes 4 months of non-working QIF import — downgrading is really not a straightforward route as software managers, for good reasons, make upgrading software easy and downgrading it harder (and one would have to get the idea of doing so).

While I admit I am not and have never been trained to be a software project manager, I did write some (extremely) modest pieces of software that are used by some other people, and the one thing I learned is : you do not break things, and if you do, you unbreak them as quickly as possible.

People can be patient with a desired functionnality not being present yet, or even a new functionnality being buggy from its start, but not when something that had been working, and that they are thus using, stops working. It disrupts their workflow, it may mean that something they had to do by some date, and that they were expecting to do with the software, suddenly cannot be done as planned anymore : all in all, it makes the software look unreliable — if faults appear today, and are not fixed, then more and bigger faults could appear tomorrow. And I think this is especially true for a software like GnuCash that is important to users because it is usually great at doing important things like accountancy.

I would be interested to know the bigger picture that I am obviously missing in the decision not to publish a .1 that fixes a regression (especially on a stable release) and allows Otto Normaluser and his Grandma to quickly get back on their feet by simpling doing what they know and have been educated to do : upgrading their software.

--
Cordialement,

Yann Salmon
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