OK then!!
I have 12 Bank Genie datasets and one test dataset
Of these :
4 are for charities of which I am treasurer
4 are for university societies of which I am treasurer
2 are to do with my late mother's estate of which I am executor
and whose financial affairs I looked after in the last years of her life
1 is for the local community
and the last 1 is my own personal finances
my own finances is the most complicated (more below); of the rest
almost all are simple, having just one or two bank accounts but one
has seven bank accounts.
My own personal finances is the most complicated which is partly because I started
managing it online in 1993; I then used a package called I think PCmoney; this I then
migrated to Quicken and eventually to Bank Genie Pro 4. So my BG files have financial
records from 1993-2015 (the BG data has more than 21Mb).
Another complication is to do with credit cards and savings accounts which have come
and gone over the years, not to mention things like savings accounts for grandchildren,
with the result that there are something like 50 (!) bank accounts.
An additional complication is that Quicken 2000, which is the last version I ran is a 16
bit program, and whether because of that or other complications, once I had more than a
few years of data in the database it started to go extremely slowly. To make matters
worse going much beyond that would result in the system giving incorrect results or
crashing, so I had to split the data into several sets for different intervals of years.
Eventually I had data for 1993-1999; 2000-2007; 2008-2010 and 2011-now
These I needed to convert to bank genie, which I did in 2013 quite some time after
converting most of the easy datasets.
In order to do that I had to export the relevant quicken data for each account in the
1993-1999 dataset (20+ bank accounts) and import them into a new BG dataset; then do
the same for the 2000-2007 data importing into the existing dataset; then the 2008-2010
dataset and then finally the current dataset.
As might be imagined this did not go altogether smoothly (mainly finger trouble) and I
had to restart more than once. It certainly exercised the import from quicken code in
Bank genie :-)
I am of course extremely grateful to George for all the hard work he put in to create
BG4 Pro from BG3 (which was what I first played with) and for implementing all the
import from QIF files stuff which I know many users have benefitted from.