And is that the case when you finish the import matcher or only after you've
saved your book, quit GnuCash, and restarted?
Regards,
John Ralls
> On Mar 17, 2020, at 11:08 AM, Joseph Vernice wrote:
>
> No, one side is to the credit card (correct source acct) and the other
> account to my
No, one side is to the credit card (correct source acct) and the other
account to my checking account (incorrect)
On 3/17/2020 1:48 PM, John Ralls wrote:
On Mar 17, 2020, at 10:18 AM, Joseph Vernice wrote:
Hello John,
The problem is the auto assigned account on the import. For some
> On Mar 17, 2020, at 10:18 AM, Joseph Vernice wrote:
>
> Hello John,
>
> The problem is the auto assigned account on the import. For some reason,
> everything is being autoassigned to my checking account instead of an expense
> or imbalance.
>
> Regards,
> Joe Vernice
>
> On 3/17/2020
Hello John,
The problem is the auto assigned account on the import. For some
reason, everything is being autoassigned to my checking account instead
of an expense or imbalance.
Regards,
Joe Vernice
On 3/17/2020 12:40 PM, John Ralls wrote:
On Mar 17, 2020, at 8:44 AM, Joseph Vernice
> On Mar 17, 2020, at 8:44 AM, Joseph Vernice wrote:
>
> There seems to be a problem with importing transactions. I am importing a
> QFX file from my credit card company and all seems fine. When I close and
> re-open the gnucash file, the transactions offsetting account all change to
>
There seems to be a problem with importing transactions. I am importing
a QFX file from my credit card company and all seems fine. When I close
and re-open the gnucash file, the transactions offsetting account all
change to my checking account. Is this s bug? How can I fix it? How
can it