Phyllis,
I have many questions about this issue.
1. Are you importing the transactions with all their splits defined, and splits
within those imported transactions are not actually getting in to the GnuCash
data file?
2. Are you importing a record from another account (for instance, your
I think that the point Liz tried to make was a memorized transaction can be
designed to be a prototype that can be customized each time by edits that
are easy to make,
possibly more by deletions of unused splits than by adding splits.
Further, the memorized transactions can also be edited when
I don't understand. Are you saying that splits are disappearing from your
paycheck or from the record in GnuCash?
On Sat, Apr 6, 2024 at 7:27 PM Phyllis Bruce wrote:
> Your electric bill splits will change every month. Mine change once a
> year so no, though that’s a good idea. My main
Your electric bill splits will change every month. Mine change once a year so
no, though that’s a good idea. My main concern is that the splits disappear.
Hence gnu is not remembering them. I would expect to need to change them once
and be done for another year.
> On Apr 6, 2024, at 7:11
On Sat, 6 Apr 2024 17:34:26 -0500
Phyllis Bruce wrote:
> Just wanting to vent for a moment. I have my income with multiple
> splits in gnucash. Works fine for a while but when they change,
> gnucash forgets the new splits and the old ones. I don't typically
> open the imported transactions
Phyllis,
I periodically assess, as you are doing now, whether there is a better
workflow to meet my personal needs. My experience has been that the best
solution depends on specifics of the situation, which will change when the
bank changes their software, etc., hence it is very dynamic. My
Just wanting to vent for a moment. I have my income with multiple splits
in gnucash. Works fine for a while but when they change, gnucash forgets
the new splits and the old ones. I don't typically open the imported
transactions but noticed some missing from another account and I have three