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Account Codes
Each account code you enter in the general ledger
must be unique. You cannot have the code "10000" entered twice.
Codes are also sorted and listed in reports in alphabetical, not
numerical sequence. This is an important point to remember. For
example, when printing a report accounts may appear in a sequence
such as:
0095
11
25
The number "0095" is the highest number in the
sequence so logically it should appear last. It appears first
because CAPITAL will consider the first digit as the most important
in determining the sorting sequence, not the value of the number.
For neatness and also to reduce confusion both for yourself and the
computer, account codes should always have the same length. In the
above example all numbers should be padded with zeros to achieve
this. For example:
0001
0002
0007
0011
0025
0095
The sequence is now sorted the way we intended.
For reasons that will become clear once you begin to use the report
designer/editor, account codes must begin with a number, although
you can mix letters and numbers and other symbols into your account
codes if you wish, after the first digit. The key point is that
your coding of account codes should be consistent.
It is also important to assign codes in groups
depending on the accounts you are dealing with. For example, your
sales accounts might be grouped as follows:
-
sales - general
-
020 sales - whitegoods
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030 sales - music
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040 sales - computers
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And your assets as:
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010 cash in bank
-
020 debtors
-
030 inventory
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And so forth. Assigning related accounts to the
same sequence of numbers will make the task of constructing
financial reports very easy using the quick report writer. Also notice
that there are gaps between the numbers. If we needed to add an
account between two other accounts this would not be a problem
because we have left space:
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010 cash in bank ANZ
-
012 cash in bank CBA
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020 debtors
-
030 inventory
-
This is better than the following approach:
-
010 01 cash in bank ANZ
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010 02 cash in bank CBA
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020 debtors
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030 inventory
-
The above approach is acceptable, but more difficult to read.
You may also wish to group your account codes by department. For
example:
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010-01 cash in bank
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010-02 cash in bank
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020-01 debtors
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020-02 debtors
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030-01 inventory
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030-02 inventory
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Note that the extension that signifies the department follows the
account code. This is so that like accounts can still be grouped
together. Assets for all departments still begin with the account
code sequence "40000". This approach, however, makes it more
difficult for CAPITAL GL Controller's report writer to construct
reports based on start and end account code ranges. An even better
approach would be:
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0-01-010 cash in bank
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0-01-020 debtors
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0-01-030 inventory
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0-02-010 cash in bank
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0-02-020 debtors
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0-03-030 inventory
The first digit represents the account code type or classification,
the next two the department, and the remaining three the particular
account.
Not only will departmental accounts be grouped neatly together when
printing reports, but the sequence is consistent
alphabetically.
If you will be entering multi-department account codes you can
specify an input mask that
ensures that the coding you input is entered correctly. A mask can
guarantee, for example, that a dash is always placed between the
third and forth digit and fifth and sixth. It also reduces the
amount of typing you have to do. For more information on input
masks, refer to the reference guide under general operation
set-up.
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