Take the current price and add whatever the price that was subtracted off from the discount back to it and you will get the original price. If the current price of an item is $50 and had a 10% discount already taken off then dived 50 by 90% (50 / 0.9) which will give you $55.56 which is the original price before the discount. To check to make sure you did it correct take the original price, $55.56, and multiply it by 10% which will give you 55.56 * 0.1 = 5.56 and subtract that from the original; $55.56 - $5.56 = $50 which is the current price. If you have a calculator you can just enter $55.56 - 10% = $50 to check.
Divide sale price by full price. Example: item is $30 but is on sale for $15. 15/30=50%, so the item is 50% off
50
a violin was on sale of 50%. the sale price is 50 pesos . what was the original price ?
50%
Take the current price and add whatever the price that was subtracted off from the discount back to it and you will get the original price. If the current price of an item is $50 and had a 10% discount already taken off then dived 50 by 90% (50 / 0.9) which will give you $55.56 which is the original price before the discount. To check to make sure you did it correct take the original price, $55.56, and multiply it by 10% which will give you 55.56 * 0.1 = 5.56 and subtract that from the original; $55.56 - $5.56 = $50 which is the current price. If you have a calculator you can just enter $55.56 - 10% = $50 to check.
Divide sale price by full price. Example: item is $30 but is on sale for $15. 15/30=50%, so the item is 50% off
50
a violin was on sale of 50%. the sale price is 50 pesos . what was the original price ?
50%
LCM(50, 96) = 2400.
The discount price of the 50 cape would be 37.50 dollars. This is calculated by multiplying the original price (50) by the discount rate (25%) and subtracting that amount from the original price.
The question is slightly ambiguous, so I'll list the two possibilities:If the original price is 50, and the new price is 50 + a 40% markup, then we can calculate as follows:New price = 50 + 40%= 50 x 1.4= 70If however you meant that the original price is 50 including a 40% markup (eg tax), and you want to calculate the new price with this markup removed, we calculate the answer as:New price +40% = 50New price x 1.4 = 50New price = 50 / 1.4= 34.84= 35 (approx)
you can just divide it by two._____________________________________________________________(original price)-(% off in decimal form)*(original price)=[1-(% off in decimal form)]*(original price)=discounted pricein this case, (1-0.5)*(original price)=(original price)/2=discounted price
100%For example, let's say the original price is $100.Reducing it by 50% drops the price down to $50.In order to return the price to $100, $50 must be doubled, which is saying it must be increased by 100%.
Intake margin is the margin on the original selling price before all discounts or promotions are given. So for example, the original sales value of an item could be 100 on a cost price of 50. This gives us an intake margin of 50%.However the retail business marks down price by around 20% on the original selling price giving us a final realised margin of 37.50 (On the new sales value).
50