At the end of the day, you have a number. Maybe written down, maybe in your head. But roughly is doing a lot of work in that sentence.
What you do not have is: the exact cash that should be in the till; how that compares to what is actually there; whether returns were processed; what the running credit balance is.
All of that happened today. None of it is in the summary you have.
This is not a small gap. Each missing piece is a place where money can move without accountability. Quietly, in the places where the record does not reach.
The credit book is a good example. Someone buys on credit. Later, they pay. Maybe that payment gets recorded. Maybe it does not. Maybe the notebook gets wet. The debt was real. The record was fragile.
A proper end-of-day summary is not a number. It is a reconciliation. It tells you what came in, how it came in, what should be in the till, what is in the till, and what the difference is. It is signed against a name. It exists permanently.
That is what Stoka produces at the close of every shift. Not an estimate. A record.