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- C H E C K K I N G
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- Rickenbacker Software
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- CUSTOMER SERVICE
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- Rickenbacker Software is a one-man, part-time enterprise.
- Although I can not offer telephone support, I make every other
- reasonable effort to support Check King fully. Should you
- experience any problem with Check King, write me about it. If
- you provide both your address and your phone number, I'll
- normally get back to you within two weeks with either a fix or a
- circumvention.
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- Second Edition, September 1987
- (C) Rickenbacker Software
- All Rights Reserved
-
-
- Rickenbacker Software
- Box 11662
- Newington, Conn. 06111
-
-
- Program and Manual Written by Tom Rickenbacker
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- CHECK KING OVERVIEW
-
-
- Welcome to Check King.
-
- Check King is an easy-to-use yet full featured checkbook
- accounting system. The goal of Check King is to give you
- virtually effort-free control of your checking account.
-
- With Check King, you can,
-
- - Record your checks electronically with a minimum of
- effort.
- - Predefine twenty-one payees for 2-stroke data entry.
- - Track up to 97 categories of checks. (Twelve of your
- categories may display on the check entry screen).
- - Easily review your checks with a flexible variety of
- requests.
- - List all of the checks written between any two dates.
- - List all the checks written between any two amounts.
- - List the checks written to any one, two, or three
- payees.
- - List any combination of the above.
- - List checks by category.
- - List only outstanding transactions.
- - Reconcile your checkbook to the bank's statement
- without driving yourself to distraction.
- - Clear transactions in a matter of moments.
- - Receive help in finding discrepancies from the
- Reconciliation Problem Finder. Discrepancies caused by
- a single transaction error will often be explicitly
- identified.
-
- In short, Check King will help you to record, track, and
- balance your checks. It does the types of things you hoped a
- computer would do -- before you found out otherwise.
-
- Check King should run on any PC or PC compatible machine with at
- least 256K of memory and a floppy drive. The system was tested
- on a PC AT, an Epson Equity III, a PC XT, and the various systems
- owned by my friends. Should you find problems in running it on
- your compatible, read the section on the Refund Policy. If you
- bought directly from me, I'll gladly send you a refund. The only
- conditions are that you bought the disk directly from me and that
- you send me a short note telling me of the system on which Check
- King failed.
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- USING THIS MANUAL
-
- Alas, an on-the-disk manual can't show the screens which it
- discusses.
-
- I recommend that you:
-
- a. print out the manual and
- b. read it while seated at your computer. As you read
- about a screen, call it up on your monitor. Following along
- with the screen in front of you will make things clearer.
-
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-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
- INTRODUCTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
-
- WHY YOU SHOULD READ THIS MANUAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
- Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
-
- GETTING STARTED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- Making a back-up diskette . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- Making a Working Copy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
- FLOPPY WORKING COPIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
- HARD DISK SYSTEMS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
-
- SETTING UP CHECK KING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
- Program Files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
- Data Files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
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- YOUR FIRST SESSION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
-
- RESOLVING START-UP PROBLEMS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
-
- CHECK KING MENU SCREEN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
-
- THE CHECK ENTRY SCREEN (CE) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
-
- THE CHECK UPDATE SCREEN (CU) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
- Voiding a Check . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
- Return to the Main Menu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
- Help . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
-
- THE DEPOSIT ENTRY SCREEN (DE) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
-
- THE DEPOSIT UPDATE SCREEN (DU) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
- Voiding a Deposit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
- Return to the Main Menu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
-
- REPORTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
- Specifying Selection Criteria (RS) . . . . . . . . . . 23
- Category Breakdown Report (RC) . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
- Outstanding Transaction Report (RO) . . . . . . . . . . 26
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- BANK STATEMENT RECONCILIATION (P) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
- Entering Service Charges and Interest Payments . . . . 27
- Clearing Checks and Deposits . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
- Computing Unrecorded Checks and Deposits . . . . . 28
- Hunting Down an Out of Balance Condition . . . . . 29
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- PAYEE SETUP/UPDATE (P) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
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- CLASSIFICATION SETUP/UPDATE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
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- MISCELLANEOUS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
- Change Default Check Number (MC) . . . . . . . . . . . 32
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- Adjust Check Book Balance (MA) . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
- Future Enhancements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
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- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
- Why don't you provide the ability to print checks? . . 34
- Why don't your screens just pop up instead of writing
- themselves? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
- Why is the price so low? Is the product any good? . . 35
- Can I avoid reentering my payee list and check
- classifications whenever I open a new checking
- account? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
- How is this better than a spreadsheet? . . . . . . . . 37
- My screen got garbled? What should I do? . . . . . . . 37
- When is the next update and what will it contain? . . . 38
- I make a lot of cash withdrawals from an Automated
- Teller Machine (ATM). Does this make Check King
- useless for me? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
- How many checks can Check King handle? . . . . . . . . 40
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- CHECK KING'S FILES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
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- THE FUNCTION KEYS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
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- REGISTERING CHECK KING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
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- LEGALITIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
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- Page 1
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
- Why another checking system? I became intrigued by a statement
- of a friend. He said, "I just wrote myself a little checking
- system. It's coming along fairly well. Now it's almost as easy
- to use the computer system as it is NOT to use it."
-
- Automated checking systems are on the receiving end of several
- jokes. "I don't need a computer to balance my checks" is true.
- You also don't need your car to get to work. It just makes it a
- heckuva lot easier.
-
- How often have you searched through your check register to see
- whether you had indeed paid a check? How often, in frustration,
- have you adjusted your balance because you couldn't find an
- error? And, if you've ever tried to track your expenses, do you
- believe that your check register was easy to use?
-
- Check King does require an extra step on your part. You must
- enter your checks and deposits into the computer.
-
- CHECK KING, HOWEVER, WORKS WITH YOU TO MINIMIZE THE TIME IT TAKES
- TO ENTER DATA.
-
- It provides:
-
- - a built in macro feature for entering payees.
-
- - sensible defaults throughout its screens which
- require just the press of the RETURN key.
-
- - liberal and consistent use of the function keys.
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- - help screens where they are needed.
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- It avoids making you read more than you need to by:
-
- - providing uncluttered, layered menus (which may be
- bypassed by the advanced user).
-
- - minimizing the need for error messages by minimizing the
- opportunities for error.
-
- SO, on average, a check entry consists of around nine keystrokes.
- A deposit averages seven strokes plus any memo entry you elect to
- enter.
-
- In exchange for those keystrokes, Check King transforms your
- electronic check register into a powerful data base. What did
- you spend on your utilities in the last year? What percent of
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- Page 2
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- your total expenditures went to entertainment? Why does your
- bank statement not balance to your register statement?
-
- Look at that last question again. Check King will do a lot to
- provide its answer. A difference caused by a single recording
- error will usually be explicitly identified at reconcilement
- time. And, for differences caused by multiple recording
- errors, Check King's "Reconciliation Problem Finder" will
- prove indispensable.
-
- In short, Check King is a time-saving tool for your check book
- accounting. And, if I've succeeded in my sub-goal, it's almost
- fun to use -- easy, efficient, and slick.
- -------------------------------------------------------
-
- WHY YOU SHOULD READ THIS MANUAL
-
- This manual will show you:
-
- a. how to get started with Check King
- and b. the fine points of the program.
-
- (Also "c.", you may find some portions of it entertaining. You
- may not. But, you may.)
-
- Every user of the program should read the section on how to get
- started with the program. It takes less than 15 minutes and
- avoids problems at the end of the month when the first
- reconcilement takes place.
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Terminology
- ___________
-
-
- CLEAR - Checks and deposits are either OPEN or CLEARed. An open
- check is one which has not yet been returned to you by
- the bank. A CLEARed check, then, is one which has been
- returned to you by the bank.
-
-
- When you first write a check or deposit, CHECK KING
- assumes that it has NOT been cleared. Normally, you
- will record whether a transaction has been cleared at
- the time that you reconcile it to your bank statement.
- (CHECK KING also permits you to CLEAR checks and
- deposits via the check and deposit update screens. You
- may find this ability handy at some time or other.)
-
- CREDIT - An accounting word not used in this documentation.
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- Page 3
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- DEBIT - The spouse of CREDIT. Also not used in this
- documentation.
-
- RECONCILEMENT - This is the process of balancing CHECK KING to
- your monthly bank statement.
-
- STATEMENT - This is sometimes used in lieu of "BANK STATEMENT".
- The bank statement is the listing of all your
- transactions and of any service charges and/or
- interest payments which have been made.
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- Page 4
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- GETTING STARTED
-
- Getting started consists of:
-
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- 1. Making a back-up diskette.
- 2. Making a working copy of CHECK KING.
- 3. Deciding where you will keep your data files.
- 4. Getting off to a clean start (i.e. balancing your
- check book BEFORE transferring it to Check King).
-
- Making a back-up diskette.
- -------------------------
-
- If you have been using computers for a while, you are already in
- the habit of backing up the software which you value. If you are
- not in the habit, this is as good a time to start as any.
-
-
- a.) Format a blank diskette to receive the back up.
-
- In your A drive, put your system diskette -- the one
- which contains FORMAT.COM.
-
- If you have two diskette drives, place the blank diskette
- in your B drive. (If you have only one drive, keep
- reading. At the appropriate times, the operating system
- will prompt you to change diskettes.)
-
- Enter:
-
- < FORMAT B: >
-
- NOTE: Throughout the manual, I shall place what
- you should enter between a "<" and a ">". The
- "<" and ">" themselves are not to be entered.
-
-
- b.) Enter:
-
- < VERIFY ON > (not strictly necessary, but a
- darn good idea.)
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- Page 5
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- c.) Enter:
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- < DISKCOPY A: B: >
-
- Label the backup diskette and store it away from the
- original.
-
-
-
- Making a Working Copy
- ---------------------
-
- Your working copy of CHECK KING will either be on a floppy or on
- a hard disk.
-
- Be sure to follow along within the right section.
-
-
-
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- FLOPPY WORKING COPIES
-
- Making a working copy is similar to the procedure for making a
- backup copy.
-
- Again, you will need a blank diskette.
-
- With the system diskette in your A drive (i.e. a diskette with
- a copy of FORMAT.COM), enter:
-
- 1) < FORMAT B: /S >
-
- NOTE: The '/S' is not needed if you do not want
- CHECK KING to be a system diskette. I
- recommend, however, that you do make it a
- system disk just for convenience.
-
- 2) Leave the diskette just created in your B drive. Place
- the Check King master in the A drive. Enter <INSTALL F>.
-
- This will copy over the files which you need to the
- working copy.
-
-
- That's it! Skip to "SETTING UP CHECK KING".
-
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- Page 6
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- HARD DISK SYSTEMS
-
- Put the Check King master diskette in your A drive. Change the
- default drive to the A drive by entering: <A:>
-
- Enter: INSTALL H
-
- That's all there is to it. This will create a subdirectory
- called CHECKING and copy all the necessary files to it.
-
- If you do not wish a CHECKING subdirectory, then copy the files
- yourself. The files that you'll need to copy are: CK.COM and
- all of the .CHN files. (I do not recommend copying over
- ELITE.COM, the batch files, or the manual itself since they will
- not be necessary.)
-
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- Page 7
-
- SETTING UP CHECK KING
-
-
-
- CHECK KING consists of:
- a) program files and
- b) data files.
-
-
- Program Files:
-
- The program files are CK.COM and several .CHN files. These must
- ALL be on your default drive (i.e. the drive represented by the
- letter before DOS' ">" prompt) and in the current subdirectory.
-
- In other words, if you have a hard disk system, you must be
- pointed not only to your hard drive (normally the "C" drive) but
- also to the subdirectory containing the CHECK KING program files.
-
- Be sure that your prompt points to the proper drive. Enter
- the CD command with no operand and see what directory you are
- pointing to. If it is not the directory with CK.COM, use the CD
- command to change the directory. (Refer to your MS DOS manual if
- you do not know how to change directories).
-
- Data Files:
-
- The data files may be either on the same drive as your program or
- on a separate drive. Paths are not supported.
-
- For all systems, I recommend a separate and dedicated floppy for
- each checking account you use with CHECK KING.
-
- CHECK KING has predetermined the file names of your data files.
- Like most design decisions, this one has a Good News / Bad News
- aspect. The Good News is that you do not have to keep track of
- file names. The Bad News is that only one checking account per
- directory is possible.
-
- So, if you wish to use CHECK KING for multiple checking accounts,
- the most straightforward method is to give each account its own
- floppy.
-
- I recommend a dedicated floppy for a very excellent reason.
- CHECK KING does NOT have any error handling routines for a full
- disk. WHY NOT? There's only one honest answer. Laziness. If a
- dedicated floppy is used, there will be no problem. The program
- does indeed warn you when you are approaching its limits (1000
- checks and 500 deposits). Use a dedicated floppy (top cost for
- a blank floppy is $1.25 unless you still buying from your local
- computer store) and you will have no problem.
-
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- Page 8
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- YOUR FIRST SESSION - Getting Started Properly
-
- O.K. You've made your backup. You've made your working copy.
- You've made your decision on where you will place your data
- files.
-
- There is one more thing to do. Before you start with Check King,
- you must balance your check book to your last bank statement. If
- you can't balance it(!), you may use either of my pre Check King
- methods.
-
- 1. The Close-the-Account-And-Open-A-New-One Method.
- 2. The Make-the-Blind-Faith-Adjustment Method.
-
- The first is what it says. It consists of withdrawing most of
- the money from your existing account and opening a nice new fresh
- account.
-
- The second consists of the act of making an entry called "FUDGE"
- or "ADJUSTMENT" to bring your balance to what the bank says it
- is.
-
- The most important part is the clean start. If you to get the
- most from Check King, start with a balanced check book.
-
- - Enter <CK> to start Check King.
-
- - Press the RETURN key (the bent arrow) when requested.
-
- - Respond to Check King's question about which drive your
- data files are to go on.
-
- - When asked for a starting balance, enter the BANK
- STATEMENT's balance -- not your check book's balance.
- Why?
-
- Statement Balance a. We start here
- + Unrecorded Deposits b. Then enter these
- - Unrecorded Checks
- -------------------
- = Book Balance c. and check on
- ourselves by making sure
- we end up here.
-
- - Enter, as the starting check number, the next check
- number which is available to your check book.
-
- - Now, you should be on the Main Menu screen. (If not,
- press the RETURN key.) You may use the arrow keys and
- space bar to cycle through the options. Or, you may
- simply enter the option's first letter.
-
-
-
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- Page 9
-
-
- - Enter your outstanding deposits via the Deposit Entry
- screen.
-
- - Enter your outstanding checks via the Check Entry screen.
- (You may type over the default check number if it is not
- the check number desired.)
-
- - After you enter your last unrecorded check, YOUR BALANCE
- SHOULD BE THE SAME BALANCE AS SHOWS IN YOUR CHECK BOOK.
- If not, read the next section. It'll work.
-
- Remember the advice from the Hitchhiker's Guide to the
- Galaxy -- DON'T PANIC.
-
-
-
-
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- Page 10
-
- RESOLVING START-UP PROBLEMS
-
- Is the balance shown by Check King the same one shown in your
- check book? If so, you may skip this page.
-
- O.K. You've got the following tools to help you: this page, the
- Outstanding Transaction report, the Check Update Screen, the
- Deposit Update Screen, and -- should all else fail -- the
- Adjustment Screen which is available via the Miscellaneous sub
- menu.
-
- First, get a hardcopy of what you've entered via the Outstanding
- Transaction report.
-
- What happened? Here are the possibilities:
-
- 1. You made a clerical error in entering the unrecorded
- checks or deposits. (Use the report to find the error.
- Use the appropriate update screen to fix it.)
-
- 2. If Check King's balance is higher than your check book's
- balance:
-
- a. you failed to record a check. (use Check Entry
- screen)
- b. you entered a deposit twice. (void from Deposit
- Update screen)
- c. you entered a check with too low an amount. (fix via
- Check Update Screen)
-
- 3. If Check King's balance is lower than your check book's
- balance:
-
- a. you failed to record a deposit. (use Deposit Entry
- screen)
- b. you entered a check which was on the bank statement.
- (void it via the Check Update screen)
- c. you entered a check with too high an amount. (fix
- via Check Update Screen)
-
- Another possibility is that the arithmetic in your check book was
- wrong. If so, Check King has begun to earn its keep.
-
- Still another possibility is that you incorrectly recorded the
- Bank Statement Balance when you started. (Here is the only truly
- legitimate reason I can come up with for using the Adjustment
- Screen of the Miscellaneous menu.)
-
- Finding the discrepancy may take some time. So be it. Again, a
- clean start will pay dividends. Put in the time now, not later.
-
-
-
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-
- Page 11
-
- CHECK KING MENU SCREEN
-
- The menu screen provides you with eight choices:
-
- Checks
- Deposits
- Reports
- Bank Statement
- Reconcilement
- Payee Setup/Update
- Klassification Setup/Update
- Miscellaneous
- Quit
-
- When you enter the screen, an arrow will be pointing to Checks.
- Should you press the RETURN (i.e. the ENTER key -- the big key
- with the bent arrow), you will see a sub-menu offering a choice
- of:
-
- Enter Checks
- Update Checks
- Return to Main Menu
-
- The sub menu is the active menu when it is on the screen. The
- active menu is always the bottom most menu -- the one which is
- highlighted.
-
- Using the spacebar, the arrow keys, or the Tab key you may
- move among the choices. You may activate a choice by pressing
- the RETURN key.
-
- ALTERNATIVE: Did you notice that Klassification is spelled with
- a "K" instead of a "C"? (Rhetorical question.)
-
- The reason is that you may also select a choice by simply
- entering its first letter. Since CHECKS expropriated the
- letter "C" for itself, "CLASSIFICATION" became
- "KLASSIFICATION."
-
- When the first-letter method is used, the RETURN key
- does not need to be pressed. For example, you can get to the
- Check Entry screen by simply entering:
-
- <CE>
-
- "C" for "Checks" (Main Menu) and "E" for "Enter
- Checks" (Sub Menu).
-
- THE CHOICES
-
- "Checks" - Select if you wish to "Enter Checks"
- or "Update Checks"
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 12
-
-
- "Deposits" - Select if you wish to "Enter Deposits"
- or "Update Deposits"
-
- "Reports" - Select for:
-
- a. Specifying Selection Criteria (build your own
- report)
- b. Category Breakdown Report (Coming soon)
- c. Outstanding Transaction Report (See just
- the deposits and checks which remain outstanding)
-
- "Bank Statement Reconcilement"
-
-
- Select if you wish to balance Check King to your bank
- statement. (Normally, run this once a month.)
- "Payee Setup/Update"
-
- Select to enter/update payees. (This is the same
- screen which is also available from the Check Entry
- screen.)
-
- "Klassification Setup/Update"
-
- Select to equate names to your first 20 check
- categories. (Check King allows 97 categories --
- from 1 through 97 -- but only keeps track of the
- names of 20.)
-
- "Miscellaneous"
-
- Currently, the active miscellaneous selections enable you
- to change your default check number and to Adjust the
- Check Book balance.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 13
-
- THE CHECK ENTRY SCREEN (CE)
-
- This screen provides a method of entering checks into the system
- with a minimum of keystrokes. From the main menu, CE takes you
- here.
-
- The Check Entry screen is divided into three sections:
-
- 1. a list of twenty-one payees which may be entered by
- just hitting the Alt key plus a letter;
- 2. the list of the meanings of classifications 1-20;
- and 3. the check entry section in the form of a replica of
- a check.
-
- The payee section shows the first twenty-one characters (of a
- possible 40 characters) which you may define by the Payee Entry
- Update Screen reachable either from the Check King Menu Screen or
- by pressing F6 on this screen.
-
- Check King assumes that you will want to issue the next check in
- sequence and that you will not care to classify it. So, it fills
- in the check number (i.e. "CK NO:") for you and provides a
- default classification of 20 (which, initially, is set up as
- "Unclassified").
-
- For each new check, then, you are initially positioned on the
- third field, "PAYEE:". You may either type in the payee or press
- the ALT key plus the letter of the payee which you wish to enter
- from the top third of the screen.
-
- NOTE: Once you begin typing, the ALT-key combination is no
- longer available. To use an ALT-key combination after you've
- already begun to enter a payee, you must leave the payee field
- and then come back to it.
-
-
-
- Cycling through fields
- -------------------
-
- You may leave a field in one of four ways:
-
- a. by pressing the RETURN key. (This will bring you to
- the next field in a clockwise direction.)
-
- b. by pressing the Down Arrow key. (This will bring
- you to the next field in a clockwise direction.
- This may seem strange when you are positioned on the
- Amount field because the Down Arrow will bring you
- "Up" to "DATE:" while the Up arrow will bring you
- back to "Payee:")
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 14
-
-
- c. by pressing the Up Arrow key. (This will bring you
- to the prior field -- in a counter-clockwise
- direction.)
-
- d. by completing the field.
-
- An ALT-key combination for the payee field completes the
- filling in of that field and automatically advances the
- cursor to the amount field.
-
- The cursor will also advance off of the amount field without
- the RETURN key being pressed if you try entering a third
- digit after the decimal point or too large a number. (Check
- King has restricted any given check to a limit of $50,000.)
-
- Entering the fields
- -------------------
-
- PAYEE: Either type it in or press an ALT-letter combination
- from the top third of the screen.
-
- Again, the ALT-letter combination is temporarily
- disabled once you jump into the routine which accepts
- typed-in payees by pressing a letter. (This is on my
- To Do list for a future version.)
-
- AMOUNT: Simply type in the amount. Commas are echoed but
- ignored.
-
- One decimal point is accepted. Letters and special
- characters other than numbers are ignored.
-
- DATE: The date field provides a default. It is either the
- system's date or the last date with which you overrode
- the system's date.
-
- Although there is some basic editing done by this
- routine when you enter a date, feel free to enter a
- check for February 31st. Extensive date editing didn't
- (and doesn't) strike me as much of a priority.
-
- CK NO: This always defaults to the next available check number.
-
- You may override the default. Check King will accept
- check numbers from 1 through 9999 provided that they are
- not already in use.
-
- If you attempt to write a check with a check number
- which is already in use, Check King will show you the
- check which already has in its claim to the check
- number.
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 15
-
-
- In case of a foul-up, use the Check Update screen to
- straighten things out.
-
- CLASS: You may enter classes from 1 through 97. Check King
- will keep track of the names assigned to classes from 1
- through 20. You will have to keep track yourself of the
- meanings of classes 21 through 97.
-
- Classes 0, 98, and 99 are reserved for Check King's
- present and future internal use.
-
- WARNING: Classes, not their equated names, are kept on
- file.
-
- To change the meaning of a class after a
- check has been written under the old meaning
- is to invite confusion.
-
- For example, let me assume that you are a
- greengrocer keeping track of how much you
- spend on bananas. So, you assign Class 14 to
- "Bananas" and use it whenever you pay for
- bananas. Let me further assume that you
- decide that you are receiving too many
- tarantulas in your banana shipments. So, you
- drop bananas from your inventory.
-
- Look out. If you reassign Class 14 to
- "Apples," what will you be doing if you run
- the Category Breakdown Report for Class 14?
-
- You guessed it. You'll be mixing Apples and
- Bananas. (Sorry! I couldn't resist.)
-
-
- "Entering the Check" (F10)
-
- Entering the check into the system is achieved by pressing <F10>.
- At this point:
-
- - Your balance is updated. (Note the upper left-hand
- corner of the screen.)
-
- - The Check Number field (i.e. CK NO:) is updated to
- reflect the next available check number.
-
- - The CLASS field is reset to 20 (for Unclassified). - The
- payee field is blanked. - The amount field is blanked.
-
- The above are Check King's verification to you that the
- check has been added.
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 16
-
-
-
-
-
- "Keeping your Place" (F7)
-
- The last five add transactions, whether from deposit entry or
- check entry, may be viewed by pressing <F7>.
-
- This ability to review your last five transactions is especially
- useful if you've lost track of where you are due to an
- interruption.
-
- Just press <F7>.
-
- "Updating Payees" (F6)
-
- After you've finally paid off your bookie and breathe a sigh of
- relief that all your limbs made it through unbroken, you vow
- never to do business with him again.
-
- You may safely reassign his code to another payee. I say
- "safely" because the payee entry, not the payee code, is kept on
- the file. So, if your bookie was ALT-B "Friendly Jim," then
- "Friendly Jim" is hard coded in all the checks written to him.
-
- You may now reassign ALT-B to "Gambler's Betting on a Cure"
- without fear of retroactively messing up checks already written
- to "Friendly Jim".
-
- "Help" (F1)
-
- What is there to say? Help is available via the F1 key. Either
- you understand it or it's not helpful.
-
- "Exiting the Screen" (F3)
-
- Since F10-Process leaves you on the Check Entry screen so that
- you may enter more checks, I figured that you might just like a
- way to leave the screen. (Brag, brag, brag.)
-
- Press <F3> and you will be returned to the Check King Menu
- Screen.
-
- NOTE: F3 does NOT update the files with whatever was on the
- screen when you pressed it. To record the last check you
- wish to enter, be sure to first press <F10>. THEN, after
- the last desired check is recorded, press <F3>.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 17
-
- THE CHECK UPDATE SCREEN (CU)
-
-
- This screen, arrived at from the menu by <CU>, is used to correct
- mistakes, to VOID checks, and as an alternative method to the
- Bank Statement Reconcilement screen for clearing a check.
-
- The highlighted line under the "Check Number:" line is to
- indicate that you may not change the key for the record.
-
- Cycling through fields
- -------------------
-
- You may move the cursor from one field to another by:
-
- a. pressing <RETURN>.
- b. using the Up arrow to go to the prior field.
- c. using the Down arrow to go the next field.
-
- Entering the fields
- -------------------
-
- Date: The format is MM/DD/YY.
-
- If you insist, you may enter some invalid dates such as
- February 30.
-
- Class: Enter the classification code desired for the check. If
- you enter a value from 1 through 20, you will see the
- legend which you entered on the Class Entry Screen (i.e.
- "Klassification Setup/Update from the Check King Main
- Menu) after you enter this field.
-
- Payee: Called "Payee," this field may be used for any memo
- entry desired -- up to 40 characters.
-
- Amount: The amount of the check. If you increase this amount,
- the increase will be deducted from your balance. If you
- decrease the amount, the amount of the decrease will be
- added to your balance.
-
- Cleared?: "N" - The check has not cleared.
- "Y" - The check Has cleared.
-
- "Updating the Check" (F10)
-
- Updating the check is achieved by pressing <F10>. At this point:
-
- - Your balance is updated. - You are returned to the Check
- Menu screen. (The assumption is that you will usually
- only be updating one check.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 18
-
-
-
-
-
- "Voiding a Check" (F4)
-
- When you VOID a check, the following occurs:
-
- - The check's amount is added back to your balance.
- - The check's amount is changed to 0.00.
- - The Payee field is changed to "VOIDED from the Check
- Update screen on mm/dd/yy" (where mm/dd/yy is the
- system's date).
- - You are returned to the Check King Main Menu.
-
- The check number of a VOIDed check does NOT become available
- for other checks. If your intent was to change the information
- for a given check, then do just that from the Check Update
- screen.
-
- "Return to the Main Menu" (F3)
-
- F3 is always the "Bail Out" option in Check King. To press F3
- is to cancel any changes which you have made and to return to
- the Check King Main Menu.
-
- "Help" (F1)
-
- Again, there is nothing to add. Either the help is clear and
- useful on its own or its useless. Explaining a help screen is
- like showing an overhead transparency of an overhead projector.
-
- QUIZ: Why is an overhead transparency of an overhead projector
- absurd?
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 19
-
- THE DEPOSIT ENTRY SCREEN (DE)
-
- This screen, arrived at from the Check King Menu Screen by
- <DE>, allows for the entry of deposits.
-
- The top part of the screen sections off the Deposit Number and
- Balance from the rest of the fields since these fields may not
- be directly changed by you.
-
- The deposit number is assigned by Check King as its means of
- identifying deposits. You may find it useful to use the Memo
- field for your own means of keeping deposits separate.
-
- The DATE field must be entered in MM/DD/YY format if you do not
- like the default of the system date.
-
- The Memo field is for your own use. If you've some use for
- grouping deposits, you might find it useful to include codes in
- the memo field to identify those groupings. Then, you will be
- able to use the "Specify Selection Criteria" option of the
- "Reports" sub menu to select just the deposits which contain
- that code. (If this seems like nonsense to you, then you
- probably have no need to group deposits and may safely ignore
- this tip.)
-
- The Amount field is the amount of the deposit. Unlike your
- bank, Check King immediately credits the deposit to your
- Balance.
-
- If you're run your check book without much of a buffer amount,
- learn your bank's policy regarding the crediting of deposits so
- that you don't overdraw your available balance. (The balance
- shown by Check King is your Total Balance which may well be
- higher than what your bank considers your Available Balance.
- Well, to be more precise, the balance shown by Check King is
- the net effect of the checks, deposits, and adjustments which
- you make to whatever you entered as your beginning balance when
- you first opened a Check King account. That may, therefore, be
- either your Total Balance or your Fictional Balance.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 20
-
- THE DEPOSIT UPDATE SCREEN (DU)
-
- This screen, arrived at from the menu by <DU>, is used to correct
- mistakes, to VOID deposits, and as an alternative method to the
- Bank Statement Reconcilement screen for clearing a deposit.
-
- The highlighted line under the "Deposit Number:" line is to
- indicate that you may not change the key for the record.
-
- Cycling through fields
- -------------------
-
- You may move the cursor from one field to another by:
-
- a. pressing <RETURN>.
- b. using the Up arrow to go to the prior field.
- c. using the Down arrow to go the next field.
-
- Entering the fields
- -------------------
-
- Date: The format is MM/DD/YY.
-
- Memo: This field may be used for any memo
- entry desired -- up to 40 characters.
-
- Amount: The amount of the deposit. If you increase this amount,
- the increase will be added to your balance. If you
- decrease the amount, the amount of the decrease will be
- deducted from your balance.
-
- Cleared?: "N" - The deposit has not cleared.
- "Y" - The deposit has cleared.
-
- "Updating the Deposit" (F10)
-
- Updating the deposit is achieved by pressing <F10>. At this
- point:
-
- - Your balance is updated. - You are returned to the Check
- Menu screen. (The assumption is that you will usually
- be updating only one deposit.)
-
-
-
- "Voiding a Deposit" (F4)
-
- When you VOID a deposit, the following occurs:
-
- - The deposit's amount is deducted from your balance.
- - The deposit's amount is changed to 0.00.
- - The Memo field is changed to "VOIDED from the Deposit
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 21
-
- Update screen on mm/dd/yy" (where mm/dd/yy is the
- system's date).
- - You are returned to the Check King Main Menu.
-
- The deposit number of a VOIDed check does NOT become available
- for other deposits.
-
- "Return to the Main Menu" (F3)
-
- F3 is always the "Bail Out" option in Check King. To press F3
- is to cancel any changes which you have made and to return to
- the Check King Main Menu.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 22
-
- REPORTS
-
- Check King provides a number of ways of reviewing your checks:
-
- a. You may specify the selection criteria for the checks
- you wish to see according to:
-
- 1. an amount range (i.e. all checks between Amount A
- and Amount B).
-
- 2. a date range (i.e. all checks written between Date
- A and Date B).
-
- 3. whether the check is cleared.
-
- 4. whether all payees are to be included in the
- selection (if not, then you may specify up to three
- payees which you do wish to include).
-
- b. You may view checks by category.
-
- c. You may view just the outstanding transactions.
-
- d. You may get a report on what takes place at
- reconcilement time.
-
- In short, your reporting options are many and flexible. The
- following sections will review each of them for you.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 23
-
-
- Specifying Selection Criteria (RS)
- -----------------------------
-
- This screen, available via <RS> ("Reports" from the main menu
- options followed by "Specify Selection Criteria on the sub menu),
- allows you to combine selection criteria according to your
- preference.
-
- -------------------------------------------
- | Amount | | Amount |
- | Exceeds | AND | Less Than |
- | | | |
- | $ -.01 | | $99,999.99 |
- |-----------------------------------------|
- | Date | | Date |
- | Exceeds | AND | Less Than |
- | | | |
- | 01/20/50 | | 12/31/99 |
- |-----------------------------------------|
- | Include cleared checks? Y |
- |-----------------------------------------|
- | Include all payees? Y |
- |-----------------------------------------|
-
-
- Don't be misled by the deceptive simplicity of the screen. It
- provides you with considerable flexibility and power in reviewing
- your transactions.
-
- The screen's defaults produce a listing of all the checks on the
- system. If you wish just to review the open checks, change
- "Include cleared checks?" from "Y" to "N".
-
- Finagle with the defaults to come up with what YOU want.
-
- Say that you want to check on whether you ever got around to
- writing that $15 check to the programmer of that shareware you
- planned to pay for. You change "Amount Exceeds" to 14.99 and
- "Amount Less Than" to 15.01. If the check for $15.00 was
- written, then you will see that check on the report -- along with
- all the other checks which you may have written for that exact
- amount.
-
- Or, let's say that your dentist, Dr. Smiley, sends you a bill for
- $47 for a filling. You may become curious about how many times
- you've been charged over $35 for a few minutes of drilling and a
- mouthful of cotton. So, you change "Amount Exceeds" to 35 and
- "Include all payees?" to "N". As you enter the "N" under
- "Include all payees?", you will see a question box open up. (See
- the next page for a representation of that box.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 24
-
-
-
- -------------------------------------------
- | Amount | | Amount |
- | Exceeds | AND | Less Than |
- | | | |
- | $ 35.00 | | $99,999.99 |
- |-----------------------------------------|
- | Date | | Date |
- | Exceeds | AND | Less Than |
- | | | |
- | 01/20/50 | | 12/31/99 |
- |-----------------------------------------|
- | Include cleared checks? Y |
- |-----------------------------------------|
- | Include all payees? N |
- |-----------------------------------------|
-
-
- -----------Select if the payee contains:-------------------------
- | Smiley More? _ |
- | |
- | |
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- Enter "Smiley." (You could enter "Dr. Smiley," but that will not
- match "Dr Smiley" since the latter does not have a period after
- the "r" of "Dr".)
-
- Then, you will be asked, "More?". In other words, do you want
- payees other than "Smiley"? Come to think of it, why not find
- out how many of Dr. Hugo Spade's bills exceeded the same amount?
- So, enter "Y" to the prompt and "Spade" to the "OR".
-
- -----------Select if the payee contains:-------------------------
- | Smiley |
- | OR Spade More? N |
- | |
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Enter the "N" for the "More?" prompt and the cursor will go back
- to the amount under "Amount Exceeds" in case you want to make
- some changes.
-
- If you are satisfied with your selection criteria, press <F10> to
- print out the report. (Further prompts will ask whether you wish
- to see the report on the screen, on the printer, or both.)
-
- In our example, you would now see all the checks exceeding $35
- which were issued to either Dr. Smiley or Dr. Spade.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 25
-
- NOTE: Once you leave the payee selection box, the cursor will
- not return to it unless you reenter the "N" for "Include
- all payees." At that point, your prior payee selections
- will reset. But, you will have the opportunity to enter
- the payee selections you intended.
-
- The searches of the payee fields are not case sensitive -- the
- capitalization of your criteria does not need to match the
- capitalization of the payee fields.
-
- To get the report you desire, enter enough of the payee field to
- make Check King's matches unique to your desired criteria. For
- example, you may save keystrokes by entering "Amer" instead of
- "American Savings Bank". It may work. But, if you have checks
- written out to "American Express," they will print out along with
- your "American Savings Bank" transactions. (Just for good
- measure, your check to "Discount Camera" will also print. Why?
- Because "amer" is part of the string found in "cAMERa.")
-
-
- Category Breakdown Report (RC)
- -------------------------
-
- If you're looking for a thin excuse to buy a 386 machine, this is
- the best that Check King has to offer. The setup for the report
- may take up to six minutes -- depending upon your computer's
- clock speed and the number of checks you've recorded.
-
- You receive four choices on how to see the report:
-
- - for all categories using all checks.
-
- - for all categories using just outstanding checks.
-
- - for 1 to ten select categories using all checks.
-
- - for 1 to ten select categories using just outstanding
- checks.
-
- Each category selected appears on its own page(s) and is followed
- by totals for the category.
-
- The types of questions for which this report provides answers
- are:
-
- - How much did I spend on Medicine?
-
- - What is the supporting detail for that amount?
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 26
-
-
- Outstanding Transaction Report (RO)
- ------------------------------
-
- Nothing fancy here. This is a report of all checks and deposits
- which have not yet been cleared via either the reconcilement
- screen (the usual way) or one of the two update screens.
-
- This report answers the following two questions:
-
- What checks and deposits have not yet been cleared?
-
- What is their total?
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 27
-
- BANK STATEMENT RECONCILIATION (P)
-
- Few things are as frustrating as an out of balance checking
- account. You can't see where you made a mistake. You can't see
- where the bank made a mistake. So, you should be in balance, but
- you are not.
-
- No system can promise that it will forever relieve you of such
- frustration. Even so, Check King does all that it can do to
- minimize your difficulties.
-
- The first thing which it does is to walk you through the
- reconciliation process.
-
- The steps are: a. entering service charges and/or interest
- payments. (These appear in the bank's
- accounting, but they have not yet been made
- known to Check King.) Assignment: YOURS.
-
- b. clearing checks and deposits. Assignment:
- YOURS.
-
- c. doing the arithmetic to compute the
- unrecorded checks and deposits (AND to apply
- them properly). Assignment: CHECK KING's.
-
- d. hunting down the possible candidates for the
- out of balance condition. Assignment: CHECK
- KING's.
-
- STEP A - Entering Service Charges and Interest Payments
-
- Check King walks you through this by asking for one service
- charge or interest payment at a time (there may be more than
- one). This relieves you of having to do any arithmetic.
-
- NOTE: Check King logs just the sum total of the interest
- charges or interest payments from the last time
- that they were entered. These are shown to you on
- the top half of the screen so that you will not
- have to wonder about what you did or did not
- record.
-
- STEP B - Clearing Checks and Deposits
-
- Check King shows you up to 2521 outstanding transactions.
-
-
- 1 If you have more than 252 transactions outstanding,
- process the first 252 with the first invocation of the
- reconcilement screen. The transactions which you clear will free
- up slots for a second invocation of the screen.
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 28
-
- You may use the cursor keys (i.e. arrows) to cycle among
- them. "N" indicates that a transaction has not been
- cleared. Change the "N" to "Y" if the transaction appears
- on the bank statement.
-
- Should you have more than 84 outstanding transactions, the
- F7 and F8 keys will enable you to flip among them.
-
- F3, at any time, will cancel the work which you've done
- during a given reconcilement session. However, if you've
- made it past the Service Charge/Interest Payment screens
- before pressing F3, the service charges and interest
- payments will have already been recorded. (You may use the
- <MA> options from the Main Menu to bring you to the
- Miscellaneous Adjustments screen to reverse the effects of
- erroneous recording of interest or service charges.)
-
- NOTE: A useful feature for clearing checks is the Alt-F4
- feature. Alt-F4 reverses each checks cleared
- status.
-
- For example, if all but a handful of checks have
- cleared, use Alt-F4 to change all the checks'
- cleared status to "Y". Then, move over to the
- outstanding checks and reverse their status to "N".
-
- The files are not updated until you press <F10> to update
- them. At any time before that, you may escape what you
- are doing by pressing <F3>.
-
- STEP C - Computing Unrecorded Checks and Deposits
-
- Check King does all the arithmetic based upon the data which
- you've entered and produces the "Reconcilement Balance
- Sheet".
-
- The Reconcilement Balance Sheet is divided into three
- sections: Outstanding Checks, Outstanding Deposits, and the
- Balance Sheet itself.
-
- The Outstanding Checks and Deposits are listed individually 2
- and totalled.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 2 All of the checks are listed. If there is more than one
- screen's worth of them, F7 and F8 will page through the screens.
- Only the first 16 outstanding deposits, however, are individually
- listed on the Reconcilement Balance Sheet screen.
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 29
-
-
- STEP C - Hunting Down an Out of Balance Condition
-
- If the "Difference" field of the Reconcilement Balance Sheet
- shows a zero, all is well and Check King doesn't have an
- opportunity to strut its stuff.
-
- If, however, there is a difference, Check King will:
-
- a. Show you most solitary errors which could have caused
- the difference. (By "solitary errors," I mean any
- single error which might account for the difference.
- No system can show all the possible "combinations"
- which could account for the difference. Moreover, a
- list of all possible combinations would not reduce the
- problem -- it would enlarge it.)
-
- b. List out other avenues for you to explore in balancing
- the check book.
-
- NOTE: Check King tries to avoid providing unsolicited
- advice. So, if you wish Check King's assistance, you
- must ask for it by pressing F1 when you are invited
- to do so.
-
- Finally, whether you are in balance or not, Check King gives you
- the opportunity to receive a hardcopy report on your
- reconcilement session -- by pressing F6.
-
- If you have a printer, I recommend that you ask for hardcopy.
- Today, the report already provides a useful audit trail. With
- subsequent editions, I plan to beef the report up with still more
- information -- some of which will not be available once you
- return to the Main Menu. So, if you want the report, ask for it
- from the Bank Statement Reconciliation session.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 30
-
- PAYEE SETUP/UPDATE (P)
-
- This screen allows for the creation of up to 21 macros for the
- Payee field of checks.
-
- Each macro may be up to 40 characters in length. On the Check
- Entry screen, they will be truncated to 21 characters in order to
- fit in the space available. But, all 40 characters will be
- entered into the payee field of a check.
-
- It is save to change the payee list at any time. You will not be
- changing the payee field of checks which have already been
- written.
-
- WARNING: Be careful how you leave the payee screen.
- <F3> will NOT update the payee file (PAYEE.FIL). Any
- changes made prior to pressing <F3> will be lost.
-
- <F10> does the updating. <F3> is there to give you
- the chance to change your mind.
-
- NOTE: If you maintain more than one checking account, you need
- not reenter the payees for each account. Just COPY
- PAYEE.FIL to the diskette of the second account. (You may
- do this even after you've opened the account.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 31
-
- CLASSIFICATION SETUP/UPDATE
-
- The classifications (i.e. categories) of checks provided as
- defaults roughly correspond to Schedule B of the 1040. You may
- well wish to open up other categories.
-
- Categories 1 through 97 are available for your use. Only
- categories 1-20, however, currently display on the Check Entry
- screen. So, if you desire more than 20 categories, I recommend
- that you write them out on a card or sheet of paper kept close to
- your computer.
-
- (Digression: My computer faces a wall. On that will, I used to
- tack various notes to myself -- the syntax of
- commands I can never remember and the like.
-
- My wife, easily more organized than I, bought me a
- simple cork board from Caldors or the like. It
- hangs behind my monitor. You'll find such a board
- an ideal place to keep categories 21 - 97 along
- with a lot of other stuff you may find yourself
- forever hunting for.
-
- This Public Service Announcement is presented at no
- extra charge.)
-
- The category/class CODES, not their equivalent explanations, are
- kept on the file. This has a very important implication.
-
- DO NOT CHANGE A CATEGORY (I.E. CLASS) CODE'S MEANING AFTER YOU
- HAVE USED THE CODE.
-
- Why not?
-
- Assume that you are a greengrocer keeping track of how much you
- spend on bananas. So, you assign Class 14 to "Bananas" and use
- it whenever you pay for bananas. Further assume that you decide
- that you are receiving too many tarantulas in your banana
- shipments. So, you drop bananas from your inventory.
-
- Look out. If you reassign Class 14 to "Apples," what will you be
- doing if you run the Category Breakdown Report for Class 14?
-
- You guessed it. You'll be mixing Apples and Bananas -- the Moral
- Equivalent of mixing Apples and Oranges which we all know is some
- sort of sin. (Yes, I do realize that I perpetrated this same
- example earlier. I just wanted to give everyone a chance to see
- it since some folks merely skim manuals!)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 32
-
- MISCELLANEOUS
-
- The miscellaneous options are for the more rarely used functions
- of Check King -- changing default check numbers, making flat
- adjustments, and future enhancements.
-
- While you will not often need to select from this menu, you may
- find yourself glad that it is here.
-
-
-
- Change Default Check Number (MC)
-
- The default check number is set when you first set up a Check
- King checking account. As you enter checks, it gets incremented
- by 1.
-
- If, for one reason or another, you find yourself having to
- constantly override the default check number, you probably need
- to reset it.
-
- This screen permits changing the number. If the number you enter
- is already in use, it will be set to the first available number
- AFTER the one you provide. For example, if you have written
- checks 2000-2150 and enter a default check number of "2110," it
- will show up as 2151. Why? Because that is the first available
- check number after 2110.
-
-
- Adjust Check Book Balance (MA)
-
- There ARE Those Times.
-
- If you select this screen, read the advice on it before
- continuing on to make the adjustment. Normally, you should be
- able to find a better way to get into balance (i.e. by correcting
- some data entry error?).
-
- I put this screen in for two reasons:
-
- a. for myself.
-
- b. for the Check King customer who doesn't initially set up
- Check King correctly -- either out of confusion from
- unclear instructions on my part or out of impatience to
- get started. Soon or later, this customer will confront
- the error. A simple adjustment may be the best way to get
- into balance.
-
- c. for people who make stupid mistakes they don't want to
- correct properly. For example, up above it says, "I put
- this screen in for two reasons:". This is a third
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 33
-
- reason. This is also an adjustment to that sentence. So,
- I put this screen in for three reasons. (Great, one error
- corrected!)
-
- Future Enhancements
-
- This screen will tell you my ideas. If you'd like to see Check
- King made more useful for YOUR needs, tell me your ideas. Who
- knows? Your idea may be incorporated. (If you're first with the
- idea, you will the upgrade containing it for free.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 34
-
- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
-
- This section is to provide, in a question and answer format, the
- information which is most commonly requested.
-
- Why don't you provide the ability to print checks?
- --------------------------------------------------
-
- I wrote Check King to address the needs of the personal
- checking account. My guide in deciding what to include and
- what not to include was, "What would I find useful?"
-
- As a user of Check King, I don't want to get into buying
- pre-printed checks. I'll do anything to avoid changing
- paper in my printer. For the number of checks which I
- process each month (35), it certainly is not worth changing
- forms -- especially since I seldom write all 35 checks at
- one time.
-
- Also, preprinted checks raise all sorts of questions about
- coordinating the check number in the system to that of the
- preprinted forms. I've worked with preprinted forms
- professionally. I have little desire to work with them at
- home.
-
- And, I suspect, neither do you! If I provided the feature,
- I'd have to force you into giving Check King more
- information than it now requests. Documentation comments
- which you may now enter into the "Payee" field would have to
- go into a separate "Memo" field. Your record would be
- larger. Your disk space more limited. And, to some extent,
- the execution times would be slower.
-
- After the novelty wore off, most of my targeted market would
- stop using the preprinted checks. Some would throw the baby
- out with the wash and stop using an automated check system
- too.
-
- As a programmer, I have little desire into getting into the
- hassle of supporting umpty-ump printer standards.
-
- In short, I am convinced that the ability to print checks is
- more a marketing feature than a useful feature for most of
- us. If I get over 1,000 paying customers and after I put in
- a host of USEFUL features I have in mind, then and only then
- will I be at all interested in turning my attention to the
- it-prints-checks! gimmick.
-
- Business accounts may find it useful. For personal
- checking, it's truly fluff.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 35
-
-
- Why don't your screens just pop up instead of writing themselves?
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- They did! They did!
-
- Then, I found that they didn't work on all computers. The
- ways in which screen memory is addressed vary. My compiler
- resolves the addresses at compilation time instead of at
- execution time! So I'm stuck with either writing the
- screens out line by line or with maintaining several
- versions of Check King for various computers.
-
- I'm writing the screens out line by line, thank you.
-
- On the other hand, is it really a problem? Really?!
-
-
-
- Why is the price so low? Is the product any good?
- --------------------------------------------------
-
- Shareware is paid for on the honor system. I have no way of
- knowing who is using Check King. Those who pay for it do so
- only because of their integrity. So, it's to my benefit to
- keep the price low enough to avoid tempting people of good
- will into disregarding their consciences.
-
- Also, Check King's price is low because my costs are low.
- My investment of time was large, but my investment of money
- is minimal. My costs consist of the mailing costs of
- sending out the Thank You diskette. (I've long ago given up
- on ever recovering the costs of my hardware and software. I
- find it consoling to think of them as hobbiest expenses.)
-
- You'll be the final judge of Check King's quality. I
- consider it the equal of any checking system I've seen at
- any price.
-
- A final observation on costs and perceptions. I can't help
- noticing that most people subconsciously value a product
- according to its price. I used to give away Check King to
- friends to receive feedback. They were always too busy to
- get around to even trying it out! Then, I began selling it.
- The paying customers I've heard from thus far both use and
- love it.
-
- The Moral: If you ever have a pet for which you need to
- find a good home, don't offer the pet for free. For the
- pet's sake, sell it!
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 36
-
- Can I avoid reentering my payee list and check classifications
- whenever I open a new checking account?
- ---------------------------------------
-
- Yes.
-
- Create your new account just like you created your first
- account (See Making a Working Copy).
-
- Then, copy over to your new working copy the following files
- from your existing checking account:
-
- PAYEE.FIL
- CLASS.FIL
-
- Now, you are all set. You have a new checking account which
- recognizes the work you've already done to set up your payee
- file and your category files.
-
-
- I edited CHECK.FIL with my editor ________________ (insert name
- of some product or other) and made some changes by mistake. Now,
- check king comes up with errors. What can I do?
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Uh?! Use your backup.
-
- If you don't have a backup, I can't help. The files of
- CHECK KING are in its own format. There is nothing to be
- gained by looking at them with your own editor -- including
- trade secrets. (I don't have any trade secrets.)
-
- If you change the CHECK KING files via your word processor
- or DEBUG or whatever, CHECK KING will probably not be able
- to process them properly.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 37
-
-
- How is this better than a spreadsheet?
- -------------------------------------
-
- Few people have spreadsheets set up which make it easy to
- enter 40 characters of documentation with each check.
-
- Few worksheets provide context sensitive help. (Neither
- does Check King. It provides screen-sensitive help which,
- given the functional breakdown of the screens, is pretty
- close to context sensitive.)
-
- Few worksheets provide such easy and flexible inquiry
- ability as the Reports of Check King.
-
- Few worksheets work with you to solve your reconciliation
- problems.
-
- No worksheet has all the above advantages plus the ease of
- use provided by Check King.
-
- Check King, in the view of some, borders on fun due to the
- elegant simplicity of its interface. Its combination of
- power and ease of use make it almost enjoyable to "play"
- with your checkbook.
-
- My screen got garbled? What should I do?
- -----------------------------------------
-
- First, please accept my apology. I thought I had all the
- screen garblers corralled, branded, and exterminated.
-
- Chances are that the screen, not your data, is all that is
- garbled. If the garbled screen has Help available from it,
- press <F1> to call up the Help. This causes the screen to
- be rewritten. Then, escape from the Help back to your
- original screen.
-
- If the garbled screen does not offer Help or if the above
- did not work, then you must return to the menu by pressing
- <F3>. Then, go back to the screen which was garbled. You
- should be back in business with no loss of data.
-
- If none of the above works, it may be that your computer
- configuration is not compatible with Check King or that your
- copy has gone bad. Try recreating your Check King disk from
- the original. If that doesn't work, send for your refund.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 38
-
- When is the next update and what will it contain?
- ------------------------------------------------
-
- Check King contains over 8700 lines of code. The figure
- which pops up in the programming courses is that the average
- programmer can produce 10 debugged lines of code per day.
-
- Granted, that sounds extremely low at first blush. But, the
- point is that there is more to getting a working program
- than coding. The figure is so low because it throws out the
- lines of code which don't make it to the final product. It
- throws out the lines which didn't work or which were
- reworked.
-
- The figure is low because a good deal of time is spent in
- debugging, in documenting, in rewriting. And, when dealing
- with a new language such as ZBASIC was, a good deal of time
- is spent in working around bugs until one is finally able to
- get an upgrade. (When I was finally able to get one sent to
- me, the upgrade fixed the bugs which Zedcor never admitted
- were there --at least not to me! Companies should stop to
- consider that they might just be dealing with someone who is
- promoting their product for them. Before the stonewalling,
- I was singing the praises of ZBasic. Now, I am considering
- a switch to Quick Basic or Turbo Basic. I want a built-in
- full screen editor. Zedcor is promising one, but if Version
- 4 has bugs, will Zedcor again stonewall? Perhaps not. But,
- Zedcor's charge of $19.95 for a quarterly 19 page house
- organ is not a promising omen.)
-
- Well, to return to the question, the effort to produce Check
- King has already well exceeded one man year of spare time --
- which translates into over eighteen month's of work. The
- fun left the project some time ago. Then, it became a
- compulsion rather than a challenge.
-
- Now, Check King is at a stage of completion where I can sell
- it with pride. It enters a crowded market and I am not
- about to invest a lot in its advertizing. So, I may sell
- close to none of these despite my efforts to ensure that it
- is a useful product of professional quality.
-
- Perhaps after all this preface, you'll understand why I have
- no intention of beginning work on an upgrade until I see my
- fiftieth paying customer. I simply need to get something
- back for my efforts in order to recharge my batteries.
-
- "When," then, is about three months after the fiftieth
- payment arrives.
-
- I can't make definitive promises on what will be in the
- upgrade. My current (preliminary) thoughts are:
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 39
-
-
- - to add support for multiple checkbooks.
-
- - to provide the ability to see more than 20
- classifications on the screen by adding a scrolling
- capability to the "Class" section of the Check Entry
- Screen and to the Classification Entry/Update Screen.
-
- - to expand Check King from a check accounting program
- into a financial planning package by adding at least
- one major new feature. (You'll like the one I have
- in mind as much as you like the reconcilement aides
- and the current flexibility of the reporting.)
-
- - to include, as a bonus, some small utilities and "for
- fun" programs with which I'll be amusing myself
- during my vacation from Check King.
-
- NOTE: IF I SELL ONLY 1 COPY OF CHECK KING, THAT ONE
- CUSTOMER WILL FIND ME MORE THAN WILLING TO FIX ANY
- BUGS WHICH MAY HAVE ESCAPED MY NETS. IT'S MY
- WILLINGNESS TO ADD NEW FEATURES -- NOT MY WILLINGNESS
- TO SUPPORT THE CURRENT CHECK KING -- WHICH HINGES
- UPON ACHIEVING A MINIMAL QUOTA OF SALES.
-
-
- I make a lot of cash withdrawals from an Automated Teller Machine
- (ATM). Does this make Check King useless for me?
- -------------------------------------------------
-
- Not at all. I am a heavy user of ATMs myself. About 1/3 of my
- transactions are ATM transactions.
-
- A cash withdrawal is essentially the same as a check -- both
- lower the balance of your checking account. So, what I do is
- simply to assign each cash withdrawal a number which my checks
- are not likely to use.
-
- For example, my checks are being written in the 2000 series now.
- So, I started a separate series for my ATM withdrawals in the 20
- series. As long as I keep track of the next available check
- number for the ATM withdrawals, I'm all set.
-
- The point to keep in mind is that the available numbers for both
- checks and ATM withdrawals extends from 0001 to 9999. (Check
- King automatically assigns deposit numbers starting with 10000.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 40
-
-
- How many checks can Check King handle?
- --------------------------------------
-
- Check King can currently handle up to 1000 transactions. This
- limit will be expanded with the very next version.
-
- Check King handles amounts of less than $1,000,000 only. Those
- of you who deal in millions will have to buy a more expensive
- checking program. (Sorry!)
-
- Because the average user of Check King is unlikely to
- intentionally write a check exceeding $99,999.99, Check King
- artificially limits checks to that amount.
-
- It is advisable to open a fresh checking account every year.
- This will keep Check King's performance up and ensure that you
- will not overrun Check King's limits.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 41
-
- CHECK KING'S FILES
-
- All the following program files must be located in the current
- directory of the current drive for Check King to operate
- properly:
-
- CK.COM - The entry point to Check King. This module
- verifies whether the necessary files are
- present, shows the copyright screen, and
- transfers control to the main menu.
-
- CKMENU.CHN - The module responsible for showing the Check
- King Main Menu.
-
- CHECKENT.CHN - The Check Entry screens
-
- CHKUPDT.CHN - The Check Update screens
-
- DEPENT.CHN - The Deposit Entry screens
-
- DEPUPDT.CHN - The Deposit Update screens
-
- CHKREPTS.CHN - The Report Selection Criteria screens
-
- CKCLASS.CHN - The Classification Report screens
-
- CHKSOUT.CHN - The Outstanding Transaction report screens
-
- PAYEE.CHN - The Payee Entry/Update screens
-
- CLASS.CHN - The Classification Entry/Update screens
-
- CKRECON.CHN - The Bank Statement Reconciliation screens
-
- CKADJUST.CHN - The Balance Adjustment screens
-
- CKNEWNUM.CHN - The Check Number Adjustment Screen
-
- In addition to the program files, Check King maintains several
- data files. All the data files must share the same directory of
- the same drive. They may or may not also share the directory and
- drive of the program files.
-
- WARNING: All Check King's files are in the vanilla ZBasic
- condensed structure. They are tricky to decipher.
- Unless you're debugging a ZBasic program which has
- defied all other efforts to track down a bug, there
- is no need to bother.
-
- Any modification of the files from outside of Check
- King may make it impossible for Check King to recover
- your data correctly. So, if you want to look
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 42
-
- directly at the files out of curiosity, go right
- ahead. BUT, be certain not to modify them from your
- word processor or editor.
-
- CHECKS.FIL - Contains all the checks and deposits. Also
- contains, as its first record, the checkbook
- balance and several control fields.
-
- All of Check King's files are in a vanilla
- ZBasic condensed structure. They are tricky to
- decipher. Unless you're debugging a ZBasic
- program which has defied all other efforts to
- track down a bug, there is no need to bother.
-
- PAYEE.FIL - Contains the payee list set up from the Payee
- Entry/Update screen.
-
- CLASS.FIL - Contains the classifications (or classes) set up
- via the Classification Entry/Update screen.
-
- ADJUST.FIL - Contains the interest payment and service charge
- amounts last entered from the Bank Statement
- Reconciliation screen.
-
- The data files do not exist on the distribution disk of Check
- King. They come into being when you first invoke Check King.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 43
-
- THE FUNCTION KEYS
-
- Check King is consistent in its use of the function keys. The
- pattern to notice is:
-
-
- F1 - HELP. Usually brings up a Help screen. On the last leg of
- the reconcilement screens, however, F1 shows an analysis of
- an out of balance condition -- another flavor of help.
-
- F3 - Used to return to the main menu. Any work done since the
- last press of F10 on the screen will be lost.
-
- ALT-F4 - This is used just on the Check Reconcilement screen to
- reverse the cleared indicators of every check shown on the
- screen. I purposely made this a bit awkward to minimize the
- risk of an unintentional clearing of all the checks.
-
- F7 - Page Back. Where there is more than one screen's worth of
- information, F7 pages back to the prior screen. If you are
- positioned on the first page of a series, F7 "wraps" around
- to the last page.
-
- F8 - Page Forward. Where there is more than one screen's worth
- of information, F8 pages forward to the next page. If you
- are positioned on the last page of a series, F8 "wraps"
- around to the first page.
-
- F10 - Process. Pressing F10 records the work which you've done
- on a screen.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 44
-
- REGISTERING CHECK KING
-
- Check King is a shareware product.
-
- Public Domain software is a gift to the public. Such software
- is, therefore, free.
-
- Shareware is NOT Public Domain software. It is, rather, software
- which is distributed on the honor system. Try it. Share it. If
- you don't find it useful, you have lost nothing. If, on the
- other hand, you do find it useful, then you are expected either
- to pay for it or to stop using it.
-
- The price of Check King is $15. It compares favorably with its
- $40 competetion but I pass on to you my savings on advertising
- and packaging.
-
- As a thank you to those with the integrity to register, I have
- prepared a Thank You Diskette consisting of my favorite Public
- Domain/Shareware programs and utilities. The good news about the
- Thank You Diskette is that it is packed with software and with
- tips. The bad news is that, as a person of integrity, you'll
- find on it still more software which you'll want to register.
-
- Registered owners will be informed of any upgrades to Check King
- and will be offered those upgrades at cost -- $3.00 as of this
- writing. (The $3.00 includes the diskette, the mailer, the
- postage, and a pittance for my time.)
-
- LEGALITIES
-
- Should you exercise reasonable care and judgment by regularly
- backing up Check King and by regularly reconciling to your bank
- statement, any program errors which may have made it past the
- extensive testing will have very little opportunity to do any
- serious damage. Regardless, Rickenbacker Software's liability
- for Check King will in no circumstances exceed its purchase
- price.
-
-
-