Hi Eric, Thank you for your help with this. I understand that the Symbol/Abbreviation should be SSE.L and that agrees with what I used to use with AceMoney, but I'm a little confused about what should appear under the heading "Namespace" in the GnuCash Security Editor and under the heading "Security" in the Price Editor.
The existing security types are listed as AMEX, EUREX, FUND, NASDAQ and NYSE, none of which appears relevant for me, which is why I created the LON type. I did this because, when I looked up SSE.L in Google, it came back with the code LON: SSE and when I did the same thing for AMZN it came back with NASDAQ: AMZN , so I concluded that LON ought to work. If that is not right, what should my security type be? Alan Eric Coates wrote > Hi Alan > > The namespace for LSE is L; thus Symbol/Abbreviation should be SSE.L > Similarly for other LSE quoted stocks > > Getting the quotes themselves is a little fraught. In my experience the > only source that "works" is AlphaVantage (the usual suggestion of using > Yahoo-JSON returns prices that are 100 times too large, LSE quotes > prices in pennies Yahoo interprets the numbers as pounds - you'll look > very rich until you note the problem!) > > However, there is a problem with AlphaVantage; they throttle the feed so > that you can only get five quotes per minute. there are two workarounds: > > (1) Tick Get Online Quotes (in the Security Editor tool) in just (say) > three stocks, run the price getter; untick those three stocks and tick > the remaining three stocks and re-run the price getter. > > (2) the AlphaVantage.pm file can be modified to include a 15 second > pause between price gets - everything goes slowly (but perhaps not too > bad for six shares) but it does go. My experience is on Ubuntu so I > can't tell you where the Alphavantage.pm file is on Windows but if you > can find it (there are probably useful hints on this mailing list) the > change needed is: > > right at the end of the file is a bit that looks something like this > > > /$quantity--;/ > > // > > /select(undef, undef, undef, .7) if ($quantity); sleep(15);/ > > // > > /}/ > > // > > /return wantarray() ? %info : \%info;/ > > (the italicisation is mine to keep that text separate from the body of > this note) except that it doesn't have the sleep(15). Adding that is the > change needed. > > The second way is better if/when you have a larger portfolio but it can > get to be a drag with all those delays! > > Good luck > > Eric > > =================================== > > On 25/04/2019 11:56, AEG via gnucash-user wrote: >> I'm using GnuCash version 2.6.21 on Windows 10 and would appreciate some >> help >> with setting up investment accounts in the UK. >> >> I have a small portfolio comprising six stocks and, following the >> tutorial, >> have successfully set up accounts for each one. However, I am not sure >> about >> the source of online stock prices so I'm hoping there will be a UK user >> who >> can point me in the right direction. >> >> So far, I have been using a trial and error approach without any success >> and >> I'm wondering whether my stock symbols might be incorrect. For example, I >> have some Scottish & Southern shares for which I have set the Symbol to >> SSE >> and in the Security Editor I have set the Namespace to LON. >> >> Any help on resolving this would be much appreciated. >> >> Alan >> -- Sent from: http://gnucash.1415818.n4.nabble.com/GnuCash-User-f1415819.html _______________________________________________ gnucash-user mailing list gnucash-user@gnucash.org To update your subscription preferences or to unsubscribe: https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-user If you are using Nabble or Gmane, please see https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/Mailing_Lists for more information. ----- Please remember to CC this list on all your replies. You can do this by using Reply-To-List or Reply-All.