--
Dave Reiser
[email protected]
I’m pretty sure what happened is Fidelity swapped the order of the price and # 
of shares for each data line, but did not change the header line to match.




> On Nov 25, 2025, at 19:35, David Carlson <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I am curious, is the wrong data under the unreversed column headers or is the 
> correct data reversed along with reversed headers?  If the latter, it would 
> be easy to create an AlternateFidelity saved setting for the new arrangement.
> 
> On Tue, Nov 25, 2025 at 6:15 PM David Reiser via gnucash-user 
> <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>> I think it has been that way for 2-3 weeks. But if you have to, you could 
>> find the first bad transaction (takes a bit of work if you hold many, many 
>> securities), delete each transaction  since then and reimport the data from 
>> that same timeframe.
>> 
>> I’m curious how you set up your csv imports for securities transactions. 
>> I’ve never gotten those to work. I use another app, csv2ofx, from Moneythumb 
>> to create an ofx file for the securities data. That has its own 
>> aggravations, but unless I can learn how to take a single line stock 
>> transaction in csv and convert it to a gnucash transaction between dollars 
>> and shares, I’m stuck.
>> --
>> Dave Reiser
>> [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> > On Nov 25, 2025, at 17:54, Fred Tydeman <[email protected] 
>> > <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>> > 
>> > I just noticed that the CSV file I downloaded from Fidelity brokerage has
>> > the
>> > Price and Shares columns reversed.  So, data I imported is wrong for some
>> > time.
>> 
> 
> --
> David Carlson

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