Difference between revisions of "Multiple formats in one table"
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:<code>MultiformatX →</code> | :<code>MultiformatX →</code> | ||
− | [[File:Chapter7_8.png]] | + | :[[File:Chapter7_8.png]] |
This table uses the number format set for each variable responsible for a row here — as long as you don’t override their settings by setting a format for <code>MultiformatX</code>. | This table uses the number format set for each variable responsible for a row here — as long as you don’t override their settings by setting a format for <code>MultiformatX</code>. | ||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
+ | * [[Creating Arrays (Tables)]] | ||
+ | * [[Working with Arrays (Tables)]] | ||
+ | * [[Table]] | ||
<footer>Display of constraint results / {{PAGENAME}} / Graphing roles</footer> | <footer>Display of constraint results / {{PAGENAME}} / Graphing roles</footer> |
Revision as of 23:32, 25 February 2016
Usually, the same number format applies to all numbers in a table (except its index values in column or row headers, which use the format set for the index variable). Sometimes, you might want to use different formats for different rows (more generally, slices) of a table. You can do this if you define the table as a list of variables, for example:
Index Years := 2007..2012
Variable DollarX := Table(Years)(...) { Formatted as dollars }
Variable PercentX := DollarX/40K { Formatted as percent }
Variable MultiformatX := [DollarX, PercentX]
MultiformatX →
This table uses the number format set for each variable responsible for a row here — as long as you don’t override their settings by setting a format for MultiformatX
.
See Also
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