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How can i convert this to a decimal in SQL? Below is the equation and i get the answer as 78 (integer) but the real answer is 78.6 (with a decimal) so i need to show this as otherwise the report wopnt tally up to 100%

(100 * [TotalVisit1]/[TotalVisits]) AS Visit1percent
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6 Answers

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convert(decimal(5,2),(100 * convert(float,[TotalVisit1])/convert(float,[TotalVisits]))) AS Visit1percent

Ugly, but it works.

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Thanks this is the one ive gone with as it rounded up the number, the other answers all worked as well though thanks allot every one :) – elphj Dec 30 '08 at 15:44
I've found it better to convert to decimal than float. Certain divisions work better with decimal, at least on Microsoft SQL server: SELECT 5555/CAST(1000 AS float), CAST(5555/CAST(1000 AS float) AS numeric(5, 2)), 5555/CAST(1000 AS decimal), CAST(5555/CAST(1000 AS decimal) AS Numeric(5, 2)) – mbrierst Dec 30 '08 at 18:50
vote up 3 vote down

Try This:

(100.0 * [TotalVisit1]/[TotalVisits]) AS Visit1percent
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Make sure you add formatting in your presentation layer to round that down to 1 or 2 decimal places. Otherwise, you're likely to run into things like 33.33333... – Michael Haren Dec 30 '08 at 15:38
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At least in MySQL (if it helps), if you want to use float numbers you had to use a type float field, not the regular int fields.

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Its probably overkill to do this, but you may wish to consider casting all values to floats to ensure accuracy at all phases.

(100.0 * ( [TotalVisit1]+0.0 )/([TotalVisits]+0.0) ) as Visit1percent

Note, you really need to put code in here for the case that TotalVisits == 0 or you will get a division by 0 answer.

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Just add a decimal to the 100

(100.0 * [TotalVisit1]/[TotalVisits]) AS Visit1percent

this forces all processing to happen in floats... if you want the final output as text, and truncated for display to only one decimal place, use Str function

Str( 100.0 * [TotalVisit1]/[TotalVisits], 4, 1 ) AS Visit1percent
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Like your str answer nice and neat looking :) – elphj Dec 30 '08 at 16:21
Thank you sir! ...glad to help – Charles Bretana Dec 30 '08 at 16:31
or thank you miss ;) – elphj Dec 31 '08 at 9:57
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This might not address you issue directly, but when you round a set of numbers for display you're never guaranteed to get numbers that add to 100 unless you take special precautions. For example, rounding 33.33333, 33.33333 and 33.33333 is going to leave you one short on the sum, so the logical thing to do is to modify the percentage for the largest value in the set to take account of any difference.

Here's a way of doing that in Oracle SQL using analytic functions and a subquery factoring (WITH) clause to generate sample data.

with data as (select 25 num from dual union all
              select 25     from dual union all
              select 25     from dual)
select num, 
case
   when rnk = 1
   then 100 - sum(pct) over (order by rnk desc
                             rows between unbounded preceding
                                      and         1 preceding)
   else pct
end pct
from
   (
   select num,
          round(100*ratio_to_report(num) over ()) pct,
          row_number() over (order by num desc) rnk
   from data
   )
/


NUM                    PCT                    
---------------------- ---------------------- 
25                     33                    
25                     33                     
25                     34
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This is a bad idea in general. If the numbers don't add to 100 due to rounding, then that's how it is. Monkeying around with them is just going to give less accurate results. – mbrierst Dec 30 '08 at 18:46
It's neither a good nor a bad idea, and generalities don't come into it. It's just a technique for achieving a specific hypothetical requirement. – David Aldridge Dec 31 '08 at 1:26
True, but it's a bad requirement. It leads to incorrectly displayed data. And it doesn't answer the question that was posed above. And it's not the most accurate solution to making the percents add to 100 either, though it may be the simplest. – mbrierst Dec 31 '08 at 14:17

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