The number in the relevant cell is displayed with more digits after the decimal point.
It is a 66.67% increase rounded to two decimal places
1.58
It is: 16.67% increase rounded to two decimal places
It is: (43,000-38,000)/38,000 times 100 = 13.16% increase rounded to two decimal places.
It displays numbers with more digits after the decimal point.
No.
The number in the relevant cell is displayed with more digits after the decimal point.
Where a number is showing some decimal points and you want to decrease the amount of decimal points it shows, you can use the decrease decimal button to do it. Each time you click it, it will remove one decimal place until you have the amount you want or all are gone. There is also a corresponding increase decimal button, which does the opposite.
There are several buttons that appear on Excel toolbar but not on other office toolbars, a few are conditional formatting, increase decimal, and decrease decimal.
It has an arrow pointing to the left and then a dot and a zero beside it and under them it has a dot and two zeros. This indicates that in has gone from having one decimal point to having two decimal points.
It allows you to increase the amount of decimal places that are shown for values in cells.
there is no percent button... just use the decimal button and then move the decimal two places down
It is a 66.67% increase rounded to two decimal places
It is a 30.30% increase recurring decimal 30
It is: 130.769% increase to 3 decimal places
Bigger Than a Decimal