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These notes provide a clear and simple explanation of all basic accounting concepts. Designed specially for students, they include definitions, examples, solved questions, and important formulas. The notes cover topics like assets, liabilities, capital, a

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These notes provide a clear and simple explanation of all basic accounting concepts. Designed specially for students, they include definitions, examples, solved questions, and important formulas. The notes cover topics like assets, liabilities, capital, accounting rules, journal entries, ledger posting, trial balance, and financial statements. Easy language and neat formatting make revision fast and effective. Perfect for quick study, exams, and daily class preparation.

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Summary Notes
Accounting

IMPORTANT POINTS TO REMEMBER

1. Types of Accounts and Journalizing Rules
• Traditional Approach
Type of Account Debit Credit
Personal The Receiver The Giver
Real What Comes In What Goes Out
Nominal All Expenses/Losses All Incomes/Profits
• Modern Approach
Type of Account Debit Credit
Asset Increase Decrease
Liability Decrease Increase
Capital Decrease Increase


Type of Account Debit Credit
Income/Profit Decrease Increase
Expense/Loss Increase Decrease

,2. Method of Recording a Journal Entry
• Format:
Debit Credit
Date Particulars
(₹) (₹)

dd/mm/yyyy Dr. Account Name XXX

To Cr. Account Name XXX

(Narration: Explanation of the
transaction)


• Example: Purchase of Machinery for ₹50,000 in Cash
Date Particulars Debit (₹) Credit (₹)

01/02/2024 Machinery A/c Dr. 50,000

To Cash A/c 50,000

(Being machinery purchased in cash)


3. Accounting Equations Assets = Liabilities + Capital

4. Ledger Balancing Steps

1. Total Debit and Credit columns.
2. If Debit > Credit, difference (debit balance) recorded on Credit side as
'By Balance c/d'.
3. If Credit > Debit, difference (credit balance) recorded on Debit side as
'To Balance c/d'.
4. Totals written, double lines drawn.
5. Bring forward balance in next period.

, Types of Ledger Accounts
1. Asset Accounts: Always debit balance; ceases when nil.
2. Liability Accounts: Always credit balance; ceases when nil.
3. Nominal Accounts: Not balanced, closed to Trading/Profit & Loss
accounts.
4. Personal Accounts:
- Debit balance: Debtor/Receivable
- Credit balance: Creditor/Payable
- Nil balance: No receivable/payable.

5. Methods of Preparing Trial Balance
(i) Totals Method: Record total debits and credits from each ledger
account. Totals must match to confirm accuracy.
(ii) Balance Method: Record only the ending balances (debit or credit).
Simplifies by listing only accounts with balances.
(iii) Compound Method : Combines totals and balances for each account.
Totals must match for both columns.


6. Treatment of Closing Stock
- Shown as a footnote in trial balance unless adjusted.
- Appears in trial balance when:
a) Gross Profit/Loss or Trading A/c is included
b) Adjusted purchases are shown
c) COGS is shown



7. Suspense Account
- Used when trial balance doesn't match due to unidentified errors.
- No specific account type (not real, personal, or nominal).
- Marked in red ink.
- Eliminated once errors are corrected.

, 8. Kinds of Cash Books
- Single Column Cash Book (Only Cash column)
- Double Column Cash Book (Cash and discount OR Cash and bank
columns)
- Triple Column Cash Book (Cash, bank, and discount columns)
- Bank Cash Book (Bank and discount column)
- Petty Cash Book (Non-analytical and analytical)


9. Contra Entry
- Used when transactions affect both cash and bank accounts (e.g.,
depositing cash in bank or withdrawing cash from bank).
- Marked with ‘C’ in the L.F. column.
- Not posted to any ledger account as both debit and credit entries
appear in the cash book.

10. Types of Petty Cash Books
- Simple/Non-Analytical Petty Cash Book: Similar to a simple cash
book.
- Analytical Petty Cash Book: Has separate columns for different
expenses like postage, wages, and stationery.
1. At recording stage (Journal): Errors of Principle, Omission,
Commission
2. At posting stage (Ledger): Partial Omission, Complete Omission,
Posting to wrong account/side/amount
3. At balancing stage (Ledger): Wrong totaling/balancing
4. At trial balance stage: Omission, Commission (Wrong
account/amount/side)
11. Stages of Errors


12. Classification of Errors
1. Single-sided errors – Affect only one ledger account
2. Double-sided errors – Affect two accounts with the same amount
3. Multiple account errors – Affect more than two accounts
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