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Thank you for that.
Very pertinent and important observations you make.
At this early stage of my involvement with gnu cash I'm still unsure if my
usage of it is optimal: am I doing things the easiest/best way?
The 'mechanics' of it, you might say.
Seems to me I do a lot of work just to get my transactions out of the bank and
into gnu cash and reconcile.
Seems to me I've heard of direct bank to gnu cash connection perhaps?
Or even without that it could well be that I'm doing things a wrong way round
and I'd love to know if so.
:)
ab
p.s. am I doing this right? I'm just using 'reply' on my Yahoo mail client. I
don't see where I can do the suggested 'reply list' or 'reply all'
On Monday 20 January 2025 at 08:33:43 am ACDT, David Cousens
<[email protected]> wrote:
There is no best reconciliation strategy. An appropriate strategy
depends on exactly what you are using GnuCash for.
A business with a high number of transactions will have a need for
relatively frequent reconciliation to detect errors, uncashed checks,
etc. and to satisfy any internal and external reportingand audit
requirements. In the case of personal finances, the frequency of
reconciliation required likely depends on the complexity of your
personal finances.
Like Ken most of my transactions are cashless these days, and being
retired a lot fewer than they were when I was working and running a
business. Then monthly reconciliations proved to be both necessary and
useful. Now I reconcile usually quarterly or even semi-annually. Like
Ken I check my accounts usually on a daily basis for major
discrepancies in the balances and for the automatically direct debited
transactions that some websites sign you up for on the pretence of
paying for a one-off (I do try to avoid them) and obvious bank errors,
but my bank has a pretty good error rate (haven't found one in the past
5 years). One factor that may influence timing would be a bank's
policies with regard to how long you may have to dispute errors and
relevant regulatory legislation that constrains application of such
policies so it is worth checking up on what those policies may be.
On updating I prefer to stay up to date with the latest version of
GnuCash. Most Linux distributions are often well behind the most recent
version. If you lag behind, particularly across the major version
boundaries updating can become a little bit more complex. There are
very rarely any major problems with the core functionality of Gnucash
in updates. The developers have done a very good job of making updates
as painless as possible with procedures to update data files built into
the update where necessary changes are made to the data file
structure.
I build GnuCash from the stable source tarballs on release. I did a
little bit of minor work on some code areas in the past so building
from scratch does not faze me but some users may find it more daunting,
mainly in having all the necessary dependency versions and development
headers available.
David Cousens
On Sat, 2025-01-18 at 21:06 +0000, arthur brogard via gnucash-user
wrote:
> i just keep personal books for the family.
> my update and reconcile procedure works but is a bit tedious. I
> can't think of any better way and I doubt there is one but i thought
> it might be good to ask.
> At sort of almost random times I decide to update the books. So I
> download from CBA transactions from the bank accounts.
> then I put them in a spreadsheet. in date order.
> then I inspect and compare with a transaction report from gnu cash -
> one for each account - and identify transactions not yet in gnu cash.
> delete all but those from the spreadsheet.
> sort on description.
> attach a fourth column for target account.
> import to gnu cash.
> that's the update
> balances should agree. that's the reconcile.
> all that downloading, spreadsheeting, sorting blah, blah..... any
> better way or that's just it?
>
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