Geert Janssens <janssens-geert <at> telenet.be> writes: > > On Tuesday 31 December 2013 10:34:41 Derek Atkins wrote: > > Hi, > > > > On Tue, December 31, 2013 9:59 am, Jannick wrote: > > > I am currently looking into using gnucash on a command line basis. > > > Are there > > > - if any - command line instructions to import (1) transactions and > > > (2) invoice data (example file shipped with the latest 29.12.2013 > > > version). > > > > > > Many thanks and have a great 2014! > > > J. > > > > Sorry, no. GnuCash is a GUI tool. There is no command line > > interface. > > > > -derek > > to add to this, if your gnucash version has been compiled with python support, you could write > python scripts to do this for you on the command line. There is unfortunately not much > documentation on this feature. The example scripts that come with the python bindings may > be a good start. > > Geert >
Thx for the quick replies! Hmm, too bad. But, Geert, picking up your idea - given that I am not good at compilation and at python - is the python support shipped with Win complilation? Coming from another (back-)end: Do you know if someone has gone down the implementation route to import data into the MySQL db? Or - more generally - if some app can cope with adding/changing transactions in the MySQL db? I am just racking my brain how to automatically import data (coming from different sources: hbci, invoice overviews, non-hbci bank transactions etc) to use all the good features coming with gnucash. Many thanks again. J. _______________________________________________ gnucash-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-devel
