 common in many businesses to finance the business by using that money to purchase say fixed assets for example and using the fixed assets then to help generate the revenue. But the loan payable, the activity with it, we don't finance all the time. We're not taking loans out all the time usually unless it's like a line of credit situation. So you've got the loan is a pretty fixed transaction and if we're paying off the loan steadily then we're going to be paying it in accordance with an amortization type of table. The problem there is that we have to deal with interest and principal breakout between those two. So we'll talk about those transactions as we go and then the equity. We don't usually post anything to the capital account but instead this account is used after this beginning balance after we did the first thing to just roll over the income statement into. Now we might have other equity accounts if we're sole proprietorship for draws the money that we take out of the business which are similar to dividends if it were a corporation except that draws we can take out as the owner anytime we need without permission from the board of directors or anything and whatnot. We don't have to worry about other shareholders getting paid the same dividends and that kind of stuff. And then we might have investments which is us putting money into the company. However, hopefully we're not putting money into the company all the time once it gets rolling we are generating revenue and then taking money out in the form of draws. So that's the general layout. Let's take a look at some other reports that are subsidiary reports to these major reports. So I'm going to duplicate a tab and look at some other common reports that we might be taking a look at. Now the first one I want to touch on is going to be the let's go to the accounting reports the trial balance the trial balance I'll just type in up top trial balance many people that that don't have an account