Calculates the discounted price from the original price and the discount rate (%) as original price × (1 − rate/100).
This takes a percentage off a price and shows both what you pay and what you save. Multiply the original price by one minus the discount rate.
is the original price, is the discount rate in per cent and is what you pay. The saving itself is .
With an original price of 2000 and a rate of 20, , and the discount is .
"20% off" and "20% of" are opposites. Twenty per cent off means you pay 80% of the price, or 1600. Twenty per cent of the price would be just 400.
Stacked discounts do not add up. Twenty per cent off followed by a further ten per cent gives , not the 1400 a straight 30% cut would give. Since , the pair is worth 28% off, not 30%.
A rate of 100 makes the item free, and anything above 100 turns the price negative. If you see that, the rate was almost certainly mistyped.