shikha thakur

I am a MBA student

Student at Iper

Studied at Maharani laxmi bai college

Studied at Ideal higher secondary school

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shikha thakur's Stashed Knowledge

Control Systems- IP University

THE CLIP IS A COMBINATION OF VARIOUS IMAGES, WORD DOCUMENTS AND PDF FILES ABOUT BLOCK DIAGRAM, POLAR PLOT, NYQUIST CRITERION, SIGNAL FLOW GRAPH, MASONS GAIN FORMULA,BODE PLOT, COMPENSATION TECHNIQUES ETC. #IPuniversity

Notes of Goods and Financial Markets, Macroeconomics and its application

This pdf contains detailed notes of Goods and Financial Markets. Goods and Finacial Markets is one of the most important topic that is covered in macroeconomics.

History Of Modern Computing

This book is about the history and analogy of computer and its impact on society. Author(s): Paul E. Ceruzzi Series: History of Computing Year: 2003

Article writing

English uses articles a lot more than some other languages as a result One of the most common mistakes people Make when speaking English is Leaving out the airtcles HOW TO USE ARTICLES There are lots of rules About the use of articles. Most mistakes with Articles are made through breaking out this rulesWhen we say What peoples Jobs are , we use A/AnSingular, countable Nouns Always have An article-a/an or the -or another Determiner (my,Your,this,That etc)When we talk about things general We usually Use a plural Noun Or an uncountable Noun with no article

Accounting Basics

Introduction to Accounting BasicsThis explanation of accounting basics will introduce you to some basic accounting principles, accounting concepts, and accounting terminology. Once you become familiar with some of these terms and concepts, you will feel comfortable navigating through the explanations, quizzes, quick tests, and other features of AccountingCoach.com.Some of the basic accounting terms that you will learn include revenues, expenses, assets, liabilities, income statement, balance sheet, and statement of cash flows. You will become familiar with accounting debits and credits as we show you how to record transactions. You will also see why two basic accounting principles, the revenue recognition principle and the matching principle, assure that a company's income statement reports a company's profitability.In this explanation of accounting basics, and throughout all of the free materials and the PRO materials—we will often omit some accounting details and complexities in order to present clear and concise explanations. This means that you should always seek professional advice for your specific circumstances.

What is Account ?

Definitions of AccountIn accounting, an account is a record in the general ledger that is used to sort and store transactions. For example, companies will have a Cash account in which to record every transaction that increases or decreases the company's cash. Another account, Sales, will collect all of the amounts from the sale of merchandise. Most accounting systems require that every transaction will affect two or more accounts. For example, a cash sale will increase the Cash account and will increase the Sales account.The term account is also used in transactions where suppliers sell goods to customers and grant credit terms such as net 10 days. In those situations, a supplier is selling goods on account and the customer has purchased goods on account. The supplier has also increased the balance in it's current asset  account entitled Accounts Receivable and the customer will increase the balance in its current liability account entitled Accounts Payable.

Project management

Project management is the practice of initiating, planning, executing, controlling, and closing the work of a team to achieve specific goals and meet specific success criteria at the specified time.The primary challenge of project management is to achieve all of the project goals within the given constraints.This information is usually described in project documentation, created at the beginning of the development process. The primary constraints are scope, time, quality and budget The secondary—and more ambitious—challenge is to optimize the allocation of necessary inputs and apply them to meet pre-defined objectives.The object of project management is to produce a complete project which complies with the client's objectives. In many cases the object of project management is also to shape or reform the client's brief to feasibly be able to address the client's objectives. Once the client's objectives are clearly established they should influence all decisions made by other people involved in the project – for example project managers, designers, contractors and sub-contractors. Ill-defined or too tightly prescribed project management objectives are detrimental to decision making.Project management typesProject management methods can be applied to any project. It is often tailored to a specific type of projects based on project size, nature and industry. For example, the construction industry, which focuses on the delivery of things like buildings, roads, and bridges, has developed its own specialized form of project management that it refers to as construction project management and in which project managers can become trained and certified. The information technology industry has also evolved to develop its own form of project management that is referred to as IT project.For each type of project management, project managers develop and utilize repeatable templates that are specific to the industry they're dealing with. This allows project plans to become very thorough and highly repeatable, with the specific intent to increase quality, lower delivery costs, and lower time to deliver project results.

What Is a Conjunction?

A conjunction is the glue that holds words, phrases and clauses (both dependent and independent ) together. There are three different kinds of conjunctions - coordinating, subordinating, and correlative - each serving its own, distinct purpose, but all working to bring words together.Thanks to conjunctions, we don't have to write short, choppy sentences. We can extend our lines with simple words like "and" or "but" and perhaps a common or two.What Is a Coordinating Conjunction?Coordinating conjuction are what come to most people's minds when they hear the word "conjunction." They join together words, phrases, and independent clauses. With them, short and choppy sentences can be joined into fuller lines. There are seven of them, and they're easy to remember if you can just think of the acromyn "FANBOYS."For - Explains reason or purpose (just like "because")And - Adds one thing to anotherNor - Used to present an alternative negative idea to an already stated negative ideaBut - Shows contrastOr - Presents an alternative or a choiceYet - Introduces a contrasting idea that follows the preceding idea logicallySo - Indicates effect, result or consequence