1. If column D422 is greater then 9,750 then multiply D422 by 10% and then floor it to the nearest 100. But what I am trying to do is;
If D422 is between 9,750 and 9,999 then multiply it by 10% then ceiling it to the nearest 100 which would be 1,000. But if it is equal to or greater the 10,000 then multiply it by 10% then floor it to the nearest 100. So the minimum 10% returned should be 1,000.
Say i got a figure 9.9218. If written "=floor(9.9218,0.0625)", the result i would get is 9.875. However, if the formula was written with the CEILING function, I would get 9.9375.
Now here's the fun part. Is it possible to combine the FLOOR and CEILING function codes into one complete function, where it could determine whether 9.9218 is closer to 9.9375 than 9.875?
The following was taken from my decimal equivalent chart, at spaces of .0156:
I am trying to round similar to Banker's Rounding or Scientific Rounding but I can't find a consistent formula that works perfect with decimals.
Using three decimal places for all the samples, I can get 0.0785 to round to 0.078 but 0.1785 wants to round to 0.179 instead of staying 0.078. Or 0.0005 will round to 0 but 0.5115 wants to round to 0.511 instead of 0.512.
Here is a list of sample numbers along with desired results: .0785 should be .078 .5115 should be .512 .5035 should be .504 .0005 should be 0 .0025 should be .002 .0194 should be .019 .0195 should be .02 .0135 should be .014 .0115 should be .012 .8115 should be .812
I cannot find a formula which gives me all of these results. Here is a list of the formulas I have tried so far (NOTE: cell A2 is the working cell in my worksheet where I enter the number to be rounded)
I have the following calculation that I use to determine if a price is outside of a floor or ceiling, if it is outside of the range it uses either the floor or ceiling price
=IF($G$76E76,-(($G$76-E76)*F13),0))
the formula is in cell G71 F13 is the total quantity E76 is the ceiling price of $15.00 F76 is the floor price of $7.50 G76 is the calculated price of ($6.21)
In this case the floor of $7.50
I would like to modify the formula to where if you input N/A (or something else) that it will give a result of $0. I do not want to put a zero in the cells for the floor and ceiling price because it will give me a result of $0.
I have a value in a cell that is to one decimal place. I need to round this value to the nearest 0.5 multiple up or down which ever is closer. The value in cell A1 reads 6.6, therefore rounding I want the cell to read 6.5 If the value in A1 is closer to 6 say 6.2 I want the cell to read 6.0
I have a sheet that i use for doing quotes for sound systems. i have a qty and price column that i input and then a column which gives me the overall total. ie qty 2 x unit amount 160.00 = 320.00 i also have a discount column that i use and a column that gives them the final price after discounts. so i will put 22% into my discount column and get 249.60 as my final price for the 2 items after the discount.
what i am wanting to do is "round up or down to the nearest 5.00 mark. so for instance, the final price in this case would be 250.00 is this possible?
I have a worksheet (Sheet1) that gets information from other sheets (1)
So in cell D7 I have the function ='1'!K33
K33 is from the Sheet labeled (1) obviously. Now the problem I am having is if the number 20.6, it automatically rounds up to 21. I need to number to round down to 20 regardless if its 20.1, or 20.9.
Since I already have a formula in D7, how do I still get the information from the other sheet but have the number round down for me. Is it possible?
Cell "CostPerEvent" has the value .298896, and when I run the following statement I expect that A2 will contain the same value .298896, yet it is entered into the cell as .3
Cells(1, 2).Value = Range("CostPerEvent").Value Is there some kind of implicit rounding going on? I rewrote the code to:
Cells(1, 2).Value = CDbl(Range("CostPerEvent").Value) But I am curious whether this behavior is documented...
I have written a macro which includes a number of calculations. This has resulted in a value with a number of decimal places. I want this value rounded to 1 decimal place and this value written to a cell. How can i round this value correctly.
I have been trying for ages to get a formula where any number prefixing .5 automatically rounds up and not down as the excel standard does.
16.4999999 does show with no decimal places as 16. 16.5 does show with no decimal place as 16. But I want it to round up to 17. and obviously 16.50000001 does indeed round to 17 anyway.
Its purley numbers that have .5 I need to go up and not down.
In one cell i have £92.00 to 2 decimal places. If i increase that to 4 decimal places it is £91.9998. I need this £92.00 to show as £91.99 (only as 2 decimal places not 4)but when i go back to 2 decimal places it shows as £92.00 again.
looking for for some help on a fairly simple problem: i've attached a worksheet, and in column B (Due to Supply Chain) i'd like to insert a formula that will subtract 21 days from the date in column Z (Pub Date), and then round that date to the nearest wednesday. is this possible?
fyi: the dates in column Z are in a yyyy-mm-dd format; they don't have to remain that way.
I need a formula showing that if a number is less than say 1.25 then it rounds down to 1.0 and if its between 1.25 and 1.75 then it rounds to 1.5 and then if greater than 1.75 then it rounds up to 2. I need it to work for all numbers not just 1.
I am trying to write a formula that will round numbers to $.05, $1, $5, and $10. The formula needs to be written in a way that If c75 <100 round to $.05, if c75 is greater than $101 but less than $500, round to $1, if c75 is greater than $501 but less than $1,000, round to $5, and if c75 is greater than $1,001, round to $10.
=IF(C75<100,ROUND(C75*20,0)/20)
but i can't quite figure out how to get the rest of it to work.
numbers in one column need to be rounded to the nearest half decimal, with next conditions(ill took number 704,00 for example): - if last two decimals are < 0,25 then my number has to be 704.00 - if last two decimals are >0,25<0,75 then my number has to be 704.50 - and finally if last two decimals are >0,75 then my number has to be 705.00
I tried with IF, CEILING, INT and ROUND functions but i didn't made it work with three options, that i need. I only made it work if i use only two options.
I have a spreadsheet which has a daily schedule. It goes from 8am to 9pm in 15 minute slots.
I am looking to do a Time Bar. Using Conditional Formatting I was wanting to know if the time now can be rounded up or down in any way
Example, As I write this the time is 15:37 I have this in a cell F4
In row8 Cells C to BC I have the time in 15min slots like 08:00 08:15 08:30 and so on. What I was thinking was could I round the time from 15:37 down to 15:30 so I can use a Conditional Format to trak the time in my schedule?
I have a set of data that is meant to distribute a certain number of items to different groups.
I have 10 groups, some will get more than others depending on previous usage. The problem is that I need the percentages to be in whole numbers and the total percentage needs to be 100%. I tried rounding but it doesn't work. Here is an example from one item's line.
Now obvously this is the value of U27 x 0.5, this varies depending on the value of U27, however is there a way to round up the sum to the nearest even number. So if the sum produces .75 then I want it to be .76.
This is what I am attempting to do via a formula in a worksheet (not VBA):
IF the last two digits of H8 are greater than 50 AND if those digits are less than the last two digits of the values contained in H9, H10, H11, H12, H13, H14, H15, and H16 THEN I would like to ROUNDDOWN(H8, 2), ELSE ROUND(H8,2).
What do you think? I've tried using multiple AND's in a conditional statement but to no avail.