Thank you.
Thanks for the help but I am still having problems.
I have Money H&B Plus and XP PRO. M y money was downloaded so I followed
the instructions to run Provlogs.reg. I originally ran Provlogs.reg and then
ran Money but realized that the instruction said I should do in reverse
order. I then rebooted and started Money and the ran Provlogs.reg. When I
ran Provlogs.reg I got the right propmts. When I ran the "Update now"
everything occurred normally and the download went into Money. I got no
propmt offering me the ability to save the file. I also searched for a log
or ofx file that looked like it was from Money but found none.
Can you provide any help?
>Cal,
>
>Thanks for the help but I am still having problems.
>
>I have Money H&B Plus and XP PRO. M y money was downloaded so I followed
>the instructions to run Provlogs.reg. I originally ran Provlogs.reg and then
>ran Money but realized that the instruction said I should do in reverse
>order. I then rebooted and started Money and the ran Provlogs.reg. When I
>ran Provlogs.reg I got the right propmts. When I ran the "Update now"
>everything occurred normally and the download went into Money. I got no
>propmt offering me the ability to save the file. I also searched for a log
>or ofx file that looked like it was from Money but found none.
>
>Can you provide any help?
Look into the same folder as your *.mny is in. Find 2 Schwab*RQ.txt
(Request) and two Schwab*RS.txt (Response) files. The OFX file that
you want is the second, and usually larger *RS.txt file.
I have done it for Fidelity
btw - I often will limit the request to only the FI I am checking so I do
not have lots of files. You will get a request to the FI for the names of
the accounts followed by request for data from each account. Thus since I
have 4 accounts at Fidelity it is 10 ".txt" files.
"neil154" <nei...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:D668057A-BE4A-416C...@microsoft.com...
Thanks for all of your help.
>4) names of the form "FI name id_number RS(or RQ).txt"
>
>I have done it for Fidelity
>
>btw - I often will limit the request to only the FI I am checking so I do
>not have lots of files. You will get a request to the FI for the names of
>the accounts followed by request for data from each account. Thus since I
>have 4 accounts at Fidelity it is 10 ".txt" files.
If the Schwab file, as with Fidelity, starts with "?xml version"
then it is OFX 2.x. You could copy the file to "test.xml" and open
that with IE. That would format things.
If it has "OFXHEADER:100" in the header, it is OFX 1.x. You can
open it with a text editor. If it does not have newline characters,
then it is even harder to view. I change all ">" characters into
newline+"<" with my editor for easier viewing.
Thanks for the additional information. As you can see I was finally ably to
get the data I needed and was even able to read it to determine that Schwab
actually has a minor mistake and now I can prove it to them.
I was a little confused by your comment about 10 .txt files. I have 6
Schwab accounts but got only 4 .txt files. I also have other accounts at
other FIs and it does not seem to matter how many accounts are at the FI, I
have 4 .txt files for each.
Thanks
Likewise the information from Cal to rename the files to .xml makes them
easily viewable in many different programs.
"neil154" <nei...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:290C89EB-C031-4E69...@microsoft.com...
It my case the Schwab file is an OFX 1.x and therefore I read it in Word but
it was not real easy to interpret.