1/19/2024 0 Comments Moneydance import csv![]() ![]() This makes import easier and allows for a difference in transit time. Some kind person on the list pointed out this technique a while ago. Then I'd have to delete or merge the other account's Moneydance allowed me to input an account, which would "link" ![]() > must merge the corresponding transactions together) > will typically be imported from both the bank AND credit card accounts you a payment from a bank account to pay off on'es credit card > - Merging new transactions with previous transactions imported from the > On Monday, Februat 10:41:26 PM UTC-6, Martin Blais wrote: And besides there are several design decisions in some importers that may not please every user, in particular about how you choose your accounts for investments (there are degrees of freedom), so even sharing is not entirely an obvious win. More importantly, regression testing for those importers is most easily carried out using actual downloaded files compared to a corresponding expected output, but these files don't share well (they contain lots of personal data) so one ends up with two repositories anyhow. A while back I created the LedgerHub project to host shared importer code and provide a framework for doing the above, but never received much contributions and honestly I didn't put the care and quality attention to it I should have. There's very little shared code out there (just basic codes for CSV files, like the ones you mention) but too few users that share the same accounts to generate the critical mass needed for reuse. In any case, you can't really get away without writing at least some code-it's just not realistic, the inputs from different people vary too much. In the right direction would be plenty sufficient if this has already I tried to search the list for more of this sort of question, soįorgive me if I've missed something. any other pointers along the above lines would be most welcome. via ledger'sĬonvert function) and post-edit once it's in ledger format? It seemedĪ. is there some better way to import bulk data (e.g. are the majority of folks writing their transactions by hand in ledger format? I feel like I must be missing something with respect to getting the csv and add exp:food:dining,Įxp:auto:fuel to my ~100 transactions a month and have those imported Icsv2ledger and reckon (granted, they can learn or follow rules). ![]() Like this appear to be interactive one-trans-at-a-time programs like Variations, I've been surprised that the only tools to do something It's against assets:checking? Is that correct?įrom trying to google "import csv account ledger" or similar It appears that all IĬan do is pass, say, `-account "assets:checking"` to have ledger know Special column keyword I can add for "account". I can track my spending against a budget. I believe here is called adding an account) and assign a payee so that The fields ledger can recognize contain these case-insensitive stringsĭate, posted, code, payee or desc or description, amount, cost,total,įor my purposes, I import my finances primarily to "categorize" (what Posting specifies what action is taken related to that account. (the first posting), and a source account (the second posting). This transaction has a date, a payee or description, a target account Verify I get the terminology, so I'll use this from the manual: My first step was going to be importing aĭownloaded. Ĭonsider that I'm about a week into reading through docs here and My own reports/visualizations with python or R, etc. Method of adding information, as well as have flexibility to generate I'm comingįrom Moneydance and just wanted to get away from the tedious GUI Mailing list for some time and decided to give it a try. It's a fresh year and I've been seeing ledger come up on the Org-mode ![]()
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