What are the Row Types?

A Financial Statement is made up of many different types of lines, or rows. Each row is defined in Financial Statement Rows, in the order they are to be printed on the report.

You can include the following different types of rows on a Financial Statement report:

  • Heading rows which are used for descriptive headings, comments, and blank rows and can appear throughout the report.
  • Page Heading rows which are similar to Heading rows, except that they appear at the top of the report and are preceded by a page throw.
  • Line rows which define the detail lines of the report that include amounts. They identify an account, or account code range, to determine the values that appear on the line.
  • Continuation rows which identify additional accounts for a Line row. These always follow a Line row type. Continuation rows are not printed on the statement. The account totals are added into the accumulated totals for the previous line. The normal sign, account details and row exclusion setting of the previous Line apply to the Continuation row.
  • Total rows which are used to print subtotal and total lines. There are seven totals available, T1 to T7. The report writer automatically adds every row amount into these totals, as the amount is printed on a statement.