Re: [OSX] 2.3.5 with DBI & SQLite

2009-09-15 Thread Phil Longstaff
On September 15, 2009 07:47:57 pm John Ralls wrote: > On Sep 15, 2009, at 11:17 AM, Phil Longstaff wrote: > > I did reply already, but here's the info again. Libdbi has 2 > > parts, the libdbi library and the dbd drivers (one driver for each > > db type: sqlite3/mysql/pgsql). In the gnucash bin

Re: [OSX] 2.3.5 with DBI & SQLite

2009-09-15 Thread John Ralls
On Sep 15, 2009, at 11:17 AM, Phil Longstaff wrote: I did reply already, but here's the info again. Libdbi has 2 parts, the libdbi library and the dbd drivers (one driver for each db type: sqlite3/mysql/pgsql). In the gnucash bin directory look for an environment variable GNC_DBD_DIR.

Re: bounty for online banking idea for GnuCash

2009-09-15 Thread Dave (DavesTechShop.net)
The concept is about aggregating all one's financial data in one place. So the tool downloads it from all the various financial institutions one deals with and then uploads it to wasabe so the user can see a complete financial picture in one place. So, yes, it is about uploading the data to wesabe.

Re: bounty for online banking idea for GnuCash

2009-09-15 Thread Martin Preuss
Hi, just a question: Is this wesabe approach really about *uploading* (!) personal financial data to their website?? Who would do something like that?? Regards Martin -- "Things are only impossible until they're not" Martin Preuss - http://www2.aquamaniac.de/ AqBanking - http://www.aqbankin

bounty for online banking idea for GnuCash

2009-09-15 Thread Dave (DavesTechShop.net)
I have a need for enhanced online banking functionality and I will put out a bounty for developing this. My goal is to be able to get *all* my banking, loan and investment info into GnuCash easily and *automatically*. GnuCash and every other personal finance app have too many limitations and frust

Re: [OSX] 2.3.5 with DBI & SQLite

2009-09-15 Thread Phil Longstaff
I did reply already, but here's the info again. Libdbi has 2 parts, the libdbi library and the dbd drivers (one driver for each db type: sqlite3/mysql/pgsql). In the gnucash bin directory look for an environment variable GNC_DBD_DIR. That is where gnucash looks for the drivers. You can add

Re: [OSX] 2.3.5 with DBI & SQLite

2009-09-15 Thread John Ralls
On Sep 11, 2009, at 2:07 PM, John Ralls wrote: Libdbi-drivers is built with Sqlite3 using /usr/lib/ libsqlite3.dylib which is distributed as part of Core Data. So far so good, everything built with no errors. When I went to try it out, though, it's not working: The File>Save As dialog bo

Re: [OSX] Webkit.

2009-09-15 Thread John Ralls
On Sep 15, 2009, at 8:37 AM, Phil Longstaff wrote: Me too. Except for a few bugs (printer font too small when report printed/image doesn't appear on invoice) on Windows, webkit seems to be stable on win32 and linux. I don't want to proceed to far without nailing it down on the mac as wel

Re: [OSX] Webkit.

2009-09-15 Thread Phil Longstaff
Me too. Except for a few bugs (printer font too small when report printed/image doesn't appear on invoice) on Windows, webkit seems to be stable on win32 and linux. I don't want to proceed to far without nailing it down on the mac as well. For win32, I ended up getting a build someone (who is

Re: [OSX] Webkit.

2009-09-15 Thread Derek Atkins
John Ralls writes: > On Sep 15, 2009, at 7:31 AM, Derek Atkins wrote: > > John Ralls writes: > > After reading the bug report it doesn't sound to me like they were > actively trying to not make xquartz work, but rather they didn't > understand what was going on. > > Perha

Re: [OSX] Webkit.

2009-09-15 Thread John Ralls
On Sep 15, 2009, at 7:31 AM, Derek Atkins wrote: John Ralls writes: After reading the bug report it doesn't sound to me like they were actively trying to not make xquartz work, but rather they didn't understand what was going on. Perhaps supplying an alternate patch based on their HEADrev m

Re: [OSX] Webkit.

2009-09-15 Thread Derek Atkins
John Ralls writes: > It seems dumb to me, too. As you may have noted, the ticket remains > open but apparently ignored. I haven't pursued it on the Webkit-gtk > list yet. > > The open hostility is unusual. More common is simple neglect. Most of > the dev teams are Linux-focussed and not terribly