On Wed, 14 Dec 2022 at 17:36, Adrien Monteleone <
adrien.montele...@lusfiber.net> wrote:
> To each their own, but that seems like lots of work.
>
> You can cancel a reconciliation once started, so if you discover
> transactions are missing, and can't find the data, just start over later
> when you
To each their own, but that seems like lots of work.
You can cancel a reconciliation once started, so if you discover
transactions are missing, and can't find the data, just start over later
when you do.
Maybe I'm misunderstanding the issue?
Regards,
Adrien
On 12/14/22 11:09 AM, Dr. David K
On Tue, 13 Dec 2022 at 17:28, Derek Atkins wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Yes, you can enter transactions in whatever order you like.
>
> However you can you only RECONCILE in date-order, because reconciliation
> is always "from the beginning of time". So once you reconcile, you cannot
> (easily) add transact
David,
As noted, the order does not matter, however, there is a quirk.
The transactions are listed in the order of entry, for each date.
If you have 10 transactions entered for say 2/15/22, that you type in
today (with the proper February date) they will appear and will affect
the balance in
If you haven't entered all previous transactions, a reconciliation
should be impossible as your records will never match the bank's. That
imbalance should be a flag to either track down a data entry error, or
missing (or duplicate) transactions.
In the case you thought they were all entered, t
Hi,
Yes, you can enter transactions in whatever order you like.
However you can you only RECONCILE in date-order, because reconciliation
is always "from the beginning of time". So once you reconcile, you cannot
(easily) add transactions earlier than the latest reconcile date, and you
cannot reco
I am starting to enter into GnuCash the transactions starting late February
this year. That’s going to be a slow painful process. However, I have had a
few transactions today, which I would like to enter too. Does the order the
transactions are entered matter, as long as the dates are correct?
In