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To get around this, you can calculate your numbers as percentages first. For example, if you type the formula =10/100 in cell A2, Excel will display the result as 0.1. If you then format that decimal as a percentage, the number will be displayed as 10%, as you 'd expect.Aug 2, 2011
Excel simply divides the values in column C by the total in C11. For the formula shown, the result is the decimal number .63. Because the Percentage number format is applied to cell E6, Excel displays .63 as 63%.
100*4117484/163715657 gives me about 2.5%. Since you didn't specify the calculator your're using, I can't give you the exact keystroke sequence, but on a typical algebraic calculator it would be something like 1 0 0 * 4 1 1 7 4 8 4 / 1 6 3 7 1 5 6 5 7 =
On an RPN or RPL calculator, it would be 1 0 0 ENTER 4 1 1 7 4 8 4 * 1 6 3 7 1 5 6 5 7 /
To display a decimal (floating point) result as a fraction, use [2nd] [FD]. For percentages, simply divide the percentage by 100 first, e.g. 75% as fraction, enter
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