The problem I have is that the bank has OFX files. But AmEx and PayPal do
not (well, AmEx does, but I'd have to pay extra and it's for a business
that's not making enough money to pay extra). I've hacked together some
python code so I can import transactions this way via csv lists (which I
wish
JEffrey Black M.B.A.
From: gnucash-user
<gnucash-user-bounces+beastmaster126=hotmail@gnucash.org> on behalf of
David Carlson <david.carlson@gmail.com>
Sent: Monday, September 25, 2017 9:23 PM
To: Warner Losh
Cc: gnucash-user@gnucash.org
S
The OFX import assistant includes a step to match newly imported
transactions to existing transactions, as you probably noticed.
The problem is that it is error prone and has to be monitored carefully
during the import process. I prefer to import a small number of
transactions at a time so that
Greetings,
I download all my transactions from my back in quickbooks OFX format. I import
them into gnu cash. This works well; however, I’ve hit a snag.
I have a credit card, a paypal account and a bank account. These all have
different formats for downloading the data from, which I can