I keep my records based on transaction date. I want to know when I bought 
something, not when a credit card company gets around to posting it. Online 
transactions will sometimes post on the transaction date, but in-store 
transaction almost never do. I almost always enter transactions in gnucash 
before I download transactions from the bank. With most transactions entered 
prior to downloading, finding mistakes and missed transactions is much easier.

Under the transaction matcher behavior in gnucash 4.0, a transaction which 
posts one day after the transaction date gets a best match probability score 
too low to ever meet the auto-match threshold during an ofx import processing 
run. For example, I bought some stamps at the post office on July 2. The credit 
card company posted the transaction on July 3. When I imported transaction on 
July 5, the transaction showed up in the matcher window with no probable match 
acknowledged.

From my perspective, transactions posting within 3 days of the transaction date 
should still get a match score of 6. One day after transaction ought to be 8. 
One of the grocery stores I go to frequently has never posted the charge to the 
credit card company the next day. Sometimes there’s only a 2-day gap, but it is 
frequently 3 days. I suspect the difference between 2 and 3 days is related to 
how late in the evening I go shopping.

And on the extreme end, for a checking account transaction, if the imported 
check number (complicated by bank-prepended zeroes) and amount match exactly, 
and the date in gnucash is within 180 days of the bank’s date, then the 
transaction should still have some usable match score. In the U.S., the bank 
will still pay that check. I have had friends sit on checks for excessive 
lengths of time.

Dave
--
Dave Reiser
[email protected]





_______________________________________________
gnucash-user mailing list
[email protected]
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.

Reply via email to