A read-only file should be protected by the OS regardless of whether or not the 
user tries to save or not. That said, in the case of Gnucash, saving is 
generally automatic and the user doesn’t actively cause it, so it’s not 
reasonable to blame the user!

IIRC Gnucash doesn’t actually overwrite the read-only file anyway — it writes a 
new file and then renames the previous file to be the backup and the new file 
to be current.

Not sure why this issue would be specific to FlatPak though.

Sent from my iPad

> On Jun 12, 2025, at 7:38 AM, kschneider bout-tyme.net 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
>> On Jun 12, 2025, at 2:35 AM, James Thorpe <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> Bottom line - I'm trying to save a read-only copy of a file that I'm done 
>> with and just want for reporting/ reference purposes. How do I do that?
> 
> Why are you trying to “save” a read only file?
> 
> Read-only implies it can’t be changed therefore there are no changes to be 
> saved.
> 
> If on the other hand you are trying to safe ‘changes’ to a new file name use 
> “save as” instead.
> 
> Ken Schneider
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