Steve said: Same reason I'd want to memorize a checking acct transaction, because it's repeated. Am I missing something here? Not sure why Q requires that I switch back and forth between menus in order to accomplish this...
markus1957 said: In Standard menu mode, you can right click on a transaction in an investment register to get access to that outdated feature of questionable current usefulness.
Steve said: Is there really no way to accomplish this without switching to Classic Menus?
mshiggins said:Don't diss what you haven't figured out a use for. Just because you don't have a use case doesn't mean others don't. Those outdated features were coded under very different circumstances than new features coded today. Those outdated features work reliably through every use case. Recently coded features work for a specific use case and typically break down with anything but the specific use case.
Steve said: Thanks everyone. Not sure I understand why memorizing an investment transaction would be outdated and not useful, any more than memorizing a banking transaction, but the responses have been helpful.
markus1957 said: mshiggins said:Don't diss what you haven't figured out a use for. Just because you don't have a use case doesn't mean others don't. Those outdated features were coded under very different circumstances than new features coded today. Those outdated features work reliably through every use case. Recently coded features work for a specific use case and typically break down with anything but the specific use case. That feature is the ultimate single use case and has since been replaced by the more versatile multi-account type/use across features, Bill & Income Reminders. There is a reason it's hidden, it's not needed anymore. Old coding doesn't make it good or powerful, it just makes it old.
David said: One big disadvantage of memorized transactions is in the inability to project into the future - really you want those bill reminders to enable Quicken to estimate what your future income and expenses will be. Really they need to remove the artificial limitations on investment transactions.
David said: I thought this morning that I had found a solution - record the transaction as a deposit in the checking account. These transactions allow changing the total and then allocating the difference across the splits. However, for some reason when trying to record the result into a bill reminder it reverses the sign of the total, doubles it, and then blows away the splits entirely. However, using the memorized transaction works fine.