What the file name will be?
Comments
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When you create a new file, it would normally be named "Roberto's Finances.quicken" if your Mac username is Roberto. You can change it to anything you want by clicking menu File > Rename...Quicken Mac Subscription; Quicken Mac user since the early 90s0
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BTW, just be aware that QM2019 is NOT an upgrade from QM2007 but a migration... QM2019 is a new Quicken for Mac product rebuilt from the ground up (built on QEM from 2010) so it still lacks features that exist in QM2007. So be sure to understand if it will meet your needs. You can read a lot more about the differences here:
https://getsatisfaction.com/quickencommunity/topics/quicken-for-mac-2018-or-qm2007
(If you find this reply helpful, please be sure to click "Like", so others will know, thanks.)
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(Canadian user since '92, STILL using QM2007)0 -
Roberto, I'm just curious why you'd need a separate file for your brokerage account. One of the key benefits to Quicken is being able to store all your financial data in one place.Quicken Mac Subscription • Quicken user since 19930
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I keep my checking and credit card info only for the current year, but my brokerage transactions are kept forever.jacobs said:Roberto, I'm just curious why you'd need a separate file for your brokerage account. One of the key benefits to Quicken is being able to store all your financial data in one place.
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But why? Wouldn't it be better to have all your history in one place? What if you want to look up something that was charged on a credit card a couple years ago? Personally, I have 20 years of transactions for all accounts in my one file and it works without problem.jacobs said:Roberto, I'm just curious why you'd need a separate file for your brokerage account. One of the key benefits to Quicken is being able to store all your financial data in one place.
Quicken Mac Subscription; Quicken Mac user since the early 90s0 -
The point is that you can keep all your transactions in a single file. Of course, there's a need to make and maintain backups in case of problems, but you can easily keep all your years of checking and credit card transactions along with your investments in one file. There's no need to create yearly files or keep things separate; in fact, what you're doing is swimming upstream against what Quicken is designed to do. If it works for you and you want to keep going that way, that's fine -- we're just telling you that there's another way that's even easier and more versatile.jacobs said:Roberto, I'm just curious why you'd need a separate file for your brokerage account. One of the key benefits to Quicken is being able to store all your financial data in one place.
(By the way, for all those single-year files you have, be sure to open them in the current version every year or two to update them to the latest file format. If you don't, you might find that when you need to look up something from many years ago, the current Quicken is unable to open the old file.)Quicken Mac Subscription • Quicken user since 19930