se to charge licensing fees to
> banks. GnuCash has no interest in that nonsense so we use the same code to
> import either.
>
> Regards,
> John Ralls
>
>
>> On Jun 15, 2018, at 2:43 PM, Evan Van Dyke wrote:
>>
>> PS: I think you misread… I was wonderin
PS: I think you misread… I was wondering if the QFX importer had good baysean
matching, the way the OFX online importer does. If I can’t import my Citi
account via OFX, then I’ll be down to manual file imports (unfortunately).
—Evan
> On Jun 15, 2018, at 4:39 PM, Evan Van Dyke wr
did for bank
> accounts in 2015.
>
> I've been forced to download the QFX file and import it. It works, but it
> much more of a pain, especially if you have a lot of accounts. If you figure
> out how to make it work please post it!
>
> Michael
>
> On Fri,
I’ve been using aqBanking to download a number of accounts for the last few
years. I’ve been unable to download my Citi credit-card since about early
April of this year. I’ve played around with a couple things (passwords with
no symbols, etc.) but I still can’t manage to make it work.
In
I have the latest patch level of 10.13.
Sent from my iPhone
> On Mar 12, 2018, at 10:15 PM, John Ralls <jra...@ceridwen.us> wrote:
>
> What version of MacOS X?
>
> Regards,
> John Ralls
>
>> On Mar 12, 2018, at 7:22 PM, Evan Van Dyke <eva...@gmail.com&g
GnuCash used to report acceptable security certificates when importing online
transactions, but lately I’ve been getting “Signer not found; certificate is
not trusted” when trying to do an online import (from every source: chase,
citi, others).
I’d like to try and understand why GnuCash
I’ve been using GnuCash for five or six years now, and by and large it works
very well for me. The one thing that I still find somewhat annoying is poor
baysean matching of imported transactions to scheduled ones on my credit cards.
Maybe 80-85% of everything matches perfectly, but there are