pedz
Registered
This may be a Bank One problem but I don't think so.
When I got to Bank One and try to download my transactions using Safari (1.2.2 on 10.3.4), the download window pops open and the transfer "times out" extremely quickly and zero bytes get transferred. IE handles the whole thing nicely and even pushs the file over to Quicken automatically.
So I went looking for the usual place where you can specify what to do with each file extension and I can't find any place to set that up.
I'd be happy writing a perl script to do this but all this is with https and not http and I do not know if there are perl packages that understand https (maybe its transparent to perl).
Any suggestions?
Oh... the reason I don't want to use IE is because it is not scriptable (the version I have) but Safari is. Unfortunately, neither Quicken nor the new Quickbooks 6 for Mac are scriptable either. But if I could get the transactions as a file on my desktop that would be a big step.
Also, I guess I should explain why I'm doing this. Quickbooks on the Mac does not do automatic electronic download like Quicken does or Quickbooks on the PC does. It does import IIF files so I'm hoping I can come up with a way to suck the data over as a QIF file, convert it to an IIF file, and then manually import it into QuickBooks.
Someday I may switch to GNU Cash but I can't move my existing data over from Quickbooks.
When I got to Bank One and try to download my transactions using Safari (1.2.2 on 10.3.4), the download window pops open and the transfer "times out" extremely quickly and zero bytes get transferred. IE handles the whole thing nicely and even pushs the file over to Quicken automatically.
So I went looking for the usual place where you can specify what to do with each file extension and I can't find any place to set that up.
I'd be happy writing a perl script to do this but all this is with https and not http and I do not know if there are perl packages that understand https (maybe its transparent to perl).
Any suggestions?
Oh... the reason I don't want to use IE is because it is not scriptable (the version I have) but Safari is. Unfortunately, neither Quicken nor the new Quickbooks 6 for Mac are scriptable either. But if I could get the transactions as a file on my desktop that would be a big step.
Also, I guess I should explain why I'm doing this. Quickbooks on the Mac does not do automatic electronic download like Quicken does or Quickbooks on the PC does. It does import IIF files so I'm hoping I can come up with a way to suck the data over as a QIF file, convert it to an IIF file, and then manually import it into QuickBooks.
Someday I may switch to GNU Cash but I can't move my existing data over from Quickbooks.