Fully integrated with the book, providing numerical exercises, multiple choice questions, videos, flashcards and further exercises for practice and revision.
Summaries of key concepts
Multiple Choice Questions
- Multiple Choice Questions 6.1
- Multiple Choice Questions 6.2
- Multiple Choice Questions 6.3
- Multiple Choice Questions 6.4
- Multiple Choice Questions 6.5
- Multiple Choice Questions 6.6
- Multiple Choice Questions 6.7
- Multiple Choice Questions 6.8
- Multiple Choice Questions 6.9
- Multiple Choice Questions 6.10
- Multiple Choice Questions 6.11
Numerical Exercises
- Numerical exercises: 6.1 – Beginnings Limited
- Numerical exercises: 6.2 – Statements of cash flows using the direct method
- Numerical exercises: 6.3 – Statements of cash flows using the indirect method
Go back over this again
- Illustration 6.1
- Annotated illustration 6.1
- Exercise 6.1 – Further examples of the importance of cash and cash inflow
- Exercise 6.2 - Cash inflows and cash outflows from operating activities
- Exercise 6.3 – Cash inflows and cash outflows from investing activities
- Exercise 6.4 – Cash inflows and cash outflows from financing activities
- Exercise 6.5 – Categorizing cash inflows and cash outflows
- Exercise 6.6 – Statements of cash flows
- Exercise 6.7 – How statements of cash flows work with the other two financial statements
- Exercise 6.8 – Example of how the statement of cash flows can explain the changes in the financial position of an entity
- Exercise 6.9 – Recap of Table 6.1
Show me how to do it
- Show me how to do it - Video 6.1: Calculating cash received from the trade receivables control account
- Show me how to do it - Video 6.2: Calculating cash paid to suppliers from the trade payables control account
- Show me how to do it - Video 6.3: Calculating cash paid for expenses using the expenses T account
- Show me how to do it - Video 6.4: Preparing the statement of cash flows using the indirect method