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Glossary
© 2005 Uniwell Software Development
A pack is how you buy the PLUs. For example, you sell
lager in pints but the pack you buy is a barrel. See also
The pack size is how many stock units of a PLU are
contained within your pack. For example, a barrel of beer
containing 11 gallons. Your pack size is 11.
Paid outs record an amount of money taken from the cash
drawer when no customer transaction has taken place. For
example, for wages or to pay a supplier.
Percentages can act on an item or the subtotal by either a
set rate of a manually entered rate. They can be negative
(discount) or positive (surcharge).
Period end is the end of a stock period. The stock period is
the time between two stocktakes.
Also known as covers. Using the covers (persons) feature
you can enter the number of people in a party and their
type. For example, 'Adult', 'Child', 'Student', 'OAP'.
A PLU is a product. PLU stands for Price Look Up. Price look
up allows sales of items through individual PLU codes
instead of prices. When a PLU is sold the POS
automatically registers the PLU price, groups and other
pre-programmed information.
POS stands for Point Of Sale. Uniwell cash registers are
referred to as POS terminals.
A preset tender button automatically tenders a preset
amount, for example £5, £10. They are used to speed up
PLUs have several price levels with three prices within
each level. Different price levels are accessed using a price
shift button or automatic price shift. The prices within
each level are accessed using a modifier.
Each program on the POS can have one or more of 8
security levels against it. Each clerk is assigned a security
level (number) between 0 and 8. If the security level is 0
the clerk will not have access to any program options. If
the clerk has a security level between 1 and 8 they will
have access to program options that have the
corresponding security level assigned.
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