This discussion merits a comment.

ALL .csv means is an indication that the data is in a file of "records" each of which contains data fields separated by commas. It does not mean ANYTHING about what the fields mean (what sort of data is there) or what is the logical order of the fields.

Thus a record with the data  A,BAC,WYZ,LMNOP  would be a perfectly well ordered record with four fields separated by commas. But it would have no meaning to your accountant.

So what we are really talking about "would an accountant be happy with data exported from gnucash in .csv (with the fields that gmucash puts into these records, in the order in which gnucash puts them, etc.). For example, the data that the accountant want might be there but not in the order expected by his or her software.

<< those of you using a 'nix OS should be able to write a shell script to rearrange the order --Note that this cannot be a responsibility of gnucash to :get the order right" as no way to know what order is required. AFAIK there is no accepted standard << but if there were, then a request "make the export/imports of gnucash match this published standard" would be a legitimate request >>


Michael D Novack


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