P.S. Further to my previous test results, I have now run all reports
(there are 51 excluding those on the Business menu (I don't use Business
functionality)) on my own books (41MB uncompressed XML) and, although I
didn't do a line by line reconciliation with my current version of
GnuCash, all
Having finally beaten WebKitGtk on Windows into submission so that it runs
JavaScript without crashing, at least in my not very extensive tests, I've
built a new Windows gnucash-5.5-1.setup.exe and uploaded it to the usual places.
The sea-256 is
No, your Gnucash is outdated. The current release is 5.5. You need the docs for
4.x. Go to https://www.gnucash.org/docs.phtml and scroll down to "Old Stable
Release".
Regards,
John Ralls
> On Feb 19, 2024, at 05:48, Stephen Blackwell wrote:
>
> I'm following the docs here:
>
hi Paul
one way of checking is running reconciliation on the bank account and check
your bank statement.
also, when you create invoice it will be affecting only the receivables, on
payment it will update the balances in your bank account
Saludos Cordiales
Murugan
The bank balance in gnucash is much higher than the actual balance. Is
there some way that I can find out why? When an invoice is created does
that amount add to the bank balance?
--
Paul L Roberts, Ph.D.
Head of School
Bay Islands International School
East Sandy Bay Beach Road, Sandy Bay
I'm following the docs here:
https://gnucash.org/docs/v5/C/gnucash-manual/fq-install.html
which say in step 3 of 11.4 "Run the *gnucash-cli --quotes info* command to
verify that the program is already in a directory that is entered in the
PATH environment variable."
What I get is:
$ gnucash-cli
Slight correction ...
Instead of:
- Run 'sudo find . -name Quote | xargs ls -al | grep Finance' to find the
location where it is installed.
It should be:
- Run 'sudo find / -name Quote | xargs ls -al | grep Finance' to find the
location where it is installed.
-- Replace dot after the find
If the OFX files are made correctly then that means the transactions are
already recorded in the account.
Each transaction in an OFX import has an FITID that is supposed to be unique
for the source institution. When creating a new transaction or matching an
existing one GnuCash records the