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General Ledger Codes 
This utility is used to add, edit and delete general ledger account
codes. Click add to add new accounts
and use the scroll bar to move in alphabetical sequence through
existing account codes. Click edit
to edit them, delete to delete them,
find to find them and
press Closeto leave this
area.
Account Code
Up to 14 characters in length, account codes must be unique and
they must begin with a letter or number. Punctuation symbols such
as dots and dashes may form part of the code (except for the
question mark symbol), after the first character.
Account codes can be changed at any time, but it is recommended
that once an account holds a balance,
it should be kept until the end of
the financial year. Changing account codes that have had journals
posted to them may invalidate prior financial reports and/or
require you to modify existing reports. Changing the account code
will not alter the audit trail history report which will
make reference to the original account code.
Consult the topic:
Account
Codes for a discussion on the issues involved in entering a
sensible, correctly numbered set of account codes.
Account Name
A description of the account, up to 44 characters
in length.
Account Type
The account type. Accounts are divided into the
following types.
Quick Code
QuickCodes are alternate codes you may create and
associate with your chart of accounts to make journal entries
easier to enter, or act as a cross-reference against another code,
such as the code used by your accountant. For example, if your
freight code is 20520-25-1, you can assign a short-cut such as
'FREIGHT' or 'FR' or 'FR1' or other 'quick' names to that general
ledger code. QuickCodes may be up to 30 characters long.
During
journal entry CAPITAL GL Controller
will attempt to match your QuickCode against a chart of accounts
code but only if the code you enter does not match an existing
chart code. If found, it will replace your QuickCode with the
actual chart code automatically.
Chart Type
You must classify your chart of account codes
into various types. Each type is described below.
Posting
Posting accounts are the regular 'backbone' of a chart of accounts.
They hold the various balances that make up the revenue, expense,
asset and liabilities accounts of the general ledger.
Total
Reserved for future use, total accounts presently serve the same
purpose as heading accounts.
Control
Control accounts are similar to regular posting accounts. However,
in an integrated system running CAPITAL Office, they serve the
purpose of preventing users allocating amounts directly to these
accounts. In CAPITAL GL Controller there is no functional
difference between a posting and control account. Yet in CAPITAL
Office it can be useful to prevent users from directly entering
adjustments or other entries against, for example, the debtors
account. If the debtor account needed to be increased or decreased
then this should be done (under almost all circumstances) by
raising an invoice, entering a payment or issuing a credit note.
This has the effect of adjusting the debtor balance automatically.
Direct manipulation of the debtor account balance should be
superfluous and assigning the account a control type prevents
CAPITAL Office users from doing so. (allowing users to edit such
accounts directly can make reconciliation of your records extremely
difficult.)
Bank
Assign this account type to your bank account or accounts. CAPITAL
GL Controller makes no functional distinction between bank and
regular posting accounts. This classification has been included for
future use.
Opening stock
For opening stock accounts. Assign your opening stock account this
account type. If CAPITAL Office directly updates cost of sales then
you may not have this account in your chart and no assignment is
necessary. If your opening stock account is not correctly assigned
to this type, the end of year roll-over may miscalculate your
retained earnings opening balance for the new year.
Closing stock
For closing stock accounts. Assign your closing stock account this
account type. If CAPITAL Office directly updates cost of sales then
you may not have this account in your chart. If your closing stock
account is not correctly assigned to this type, the end of year
roll-over may miscalculate your retained earnings opening balance
for the new year.
Heading
This account type is used for descriptive purposes only. Heading
accounts cannot hold balances. Strategically placed heading
accounts at the start of the various sections of your chart of
accounts can make your chart easier to read when printing standard
reports. Since financial reports can be fully customised, heading
accounts are not necessary in order to produce readable financial
statements.
A transaction may be
changed to any other account type until the account is issued a
balance. Once an account has a balance the account type can only be
changed to one of similar type. For example, posting, bank,
control, opening stock and closing stock all hold balances and thus
are of similar type. They cannot then be changed to non balance
holding accounts, such as heading or total.
Classification
The category of the account code is specified
here. For example, 'income', 'expense', 'fixed asset' and so
on.
Posting
Select whether the account is a debit or credit
type.
Clear Year End
This setting is used by the end of year roll-over
process in determining how to handle the account. Normally, balance
sheet accounts retain their balances at the end of the financial
year and these are carried into period 1 of the new year. For
example, the balance in your bank account or your inventory remains
the same as of the last 'moment' of trading of the last year and
the first 'moment' of trading of the new. Profit and loss accounts
such as sales and expenses normally clear to zero for the beginning
of a new year. Enter yes to clear the account at the start of the
year or no to hold the balance and carry it forward.
The end of year roll-over process uses the
end of year setting in determining the retained earnings
total that should be carried forward into the new year.
Lock (Inactivate)
The lock setting is used to trap further postings
to a superseded account. If you wish to prevent further postings to
an account code set the lock to yes. CAPITAL GL Controller will
refuse to post batches that contain journals that make reference to
locked accounts. If you are using CAPITAL Office, be sure to also
set the account type to "control" in general ledger codes
and remove any references to the account in
general ledger sets.
Comment
A brief comment relating to the account code may
be entered here.
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