On 2023-08-12 10:50, Michael or Penny Novack wrote: > SupposeĀ you asked us "I used a word processor to create a document. How > do I move THIS document to another computer?" > > You would expect us to say something like "Well what did you name that > document and into what directory (file folder) did you place it?". And > if to that question you answered "I don't know." what would you expect > us to tell you? You perhaps have hundreds of documents ending with the > file extension usual for that word processor. > > Luckily you are unlikely to have many files created by gnucash as the > "data file" (the books themselves). Should have the file extension .gnucash
Don't forget, the great majority of files ending .gnucash will most likely not be the data file but backups of it at various stages. The OP wants to look for a file whose name does _not_ include a 14-digit number, which is the timestamp for when that particular backup file was made. An additional complication is that by default Windows hides file extensions, so the OP may or may not see ".gnucash" at the end of a data file's name. What the OP should do, in my opinion, is 1. Open GnuCash on the old computer. 2. Let it open the most recently used file (as it does automatically). 3. Click File, and look at the list just under the word Properties in the menu. 4. Hover the mouse over the first of those, without clicking it. The full path and file name should appear in the status line or in a popup "tool tip", depending on GnuCash version. Stan Brown Tehachapi, CA, USA https://BrownMath.com/ _______________________________________________ gnucash-user mailing list gnucash-user@gnucash.org To update your subscription preferences or to unsubscribe: https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-user ----- Please remember to CC this list on all your replies. You can do this by using Reply-To-List or Reply-All.