![]() ![]() They are actively developing it, so that’s good. At least feels modern, but I can’t tolerate the sluggishness (again, I’m not a normal user). I design apps so I judge pretty harshly, but it’s better than stockspy for sure. Stockfolio is a native app wrapping web-based components so it’s great minus a little sluggishness but it has some pretty good features. It lets me track trades but it’s buggy with dragging stocks between categories (I have to re-enter trades sometimes), I mostly use it for some of the graph data stuff during the day (and the news tracking feature is halfway decent). StockSpy has a native interface but was designed by an asshat. ![]() Software preferences are finicky so I don't expect a miracle, just some ideas of things to look at/experiment with. I'm sort of rambling because my coffee hasn't kicked in yet but if anything needs clarification let me know. I really like graphical representations of price movements of various sorts and I'm getting tired of using a disgusting Excel sheet I've made to handle it.Īnyone know of anything like JStock but better? Thanks! I'm also extremely interested in relatively timely and accurate price updates for held securities, the ability to track options, and charting. I've started importing the last 2.5 years of my Robinhood history into JStock but I've noticed some quirks with that software (exports don't look compatible, almost to charts, and worst of all it acts really weird with tracking stock splits - doing it manually is fine but it requires a lot of homework to figure out how to price any leftover fractional shares which is mildly annoying) so basically I want to see if anyone knows of any better software.Ĭompatibility is crucial for me, I like to know if I switch to another system I'll be able to export all my stuff at a later date and - if it isn't already in a format for the new system - I can quickly enter the old data by reading a simplified transaction log or something like that, rather than sorting through even more records at a later date. It should be able to export lots of useful things in useful formats (spreadsheets, basic reports, CSV, charts) but I can settle for just the ability to export a history of purchases and sales, their dates, and the prices. Here's what I'm looking for: Desktop software (Windows and Linux with OS X support as well ideal) NOT web-based junk. So I've been searching for about 45 minutes and any time I've spent that long actively searching Google, it becomes time to ask. ![]()
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