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percent and dollar formula don't mix
Hello in Excel 2003 my formula is =(V10-U10/X10)/V10) this means
current list price - fixed price /by units sold / by current list price. example current list price is $257,506.00 fixed price is $225,000.00 units sold is 1 so the discount is 12.62% my problem is if there is more than 1 unit sold I get the wrong answer also when the fixed price is not a dollar amount but a percent example 10% then my answer is also wrong. How do I correct his thanks a million. |
percent and dollar formula don't mix
It would be helpful if you provide what the correct answer would be - however
you may want to try this =((V10-U10)/X10)/V10) (if x10 = 2 in your example the amount you should get would be 6.31% Not sure how to address the percentage problem, need more clarification. -- Wag more, bark less "Wanna Learn" wrote: Hello in Excel 2003 my formula is =(V10-U10/X10)/V10) this means current list price - fixed price /by units sold / by current list price. example current list price is $257,506.00 fixed price is $225,000.00 units sold is 1 so the discount is 12.62% my problem is if there is more than 1 unit sold I get the wrong answer also when the fixed price is not a dollar amount but a percent example 10% then my answer is also wrong. How do I correct his thanks a million. |
percent and dollar formula don't mix
The percentage discount has nothing to do with number of units sold --
unless "fixed price" is a total of all units sold, whereas "list price" is per-unit (surprise!). (If that were the case, your original formula is correct.) You should figure the discount by either the following equivalent formulas: =(V10-U10) / V10 =1 - U10 / V10 Note that your formula expresses discount in terms of positive percentage, not negative. when the fixed price is not a dollar amount but a percent example 10% then my answer is also wrong. Sure! The above formula works only if all numbers are dollar amounts. I don't know what it means to express fixed __price__ as a percentage. Percentage of what? If you can answer that question, you should know how to change the formula. For example, if U10 is a percentage of Y10, then: =1 - U10*Y10 / V10. However, U10 must consistently be either dollars or percentage. The same simple formula cannot be used for both cases. It could be made to work if you have some other cell that tells you what "flavor" is in U10. For example: =1 - if(Z10 = 1, U10, U10*Y10) / V10 where Z10 is 1 if U10 is dollars, and Z10 is 0 if U10 is percentage. But that is messy. It is better if U10 is always dollars, perhaps derived from a percentage of something else, both of which values are in other cells. ----- original posting ----- On Dec 4, 7:01*am, Wanna Learn wrote: Hello * *in Excel 2003 * *my formula is =(V10-U10/X10)/V10) * *this means * current list price - fixed price /by units sold / by current list price. * example current list price is $257,506.00 fixed price is $225,000.00 units sold is 1 so the discount is 12.62% * *my problem is if there is more than 1 unit sold I get the wrong answer also when the fixed price is not a dollar amount but a percent *example 10% then my answer is also wrong. * * *How do I correct his *thanks a million. |
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