Anonymous wrote:Do they let drive people who can not calculate 20% of a number???? What's next, Apple watch instruction how to use a toilet?
Dear friend.. first of all be generous. Never tip less then 20%. Second.. Round up to make it easy.
So if your total is 134.52 then round it up to 150 Bucks.. then one tenth of it is your ten percent.. 15 Bucks.. and now double it..
30 bucks! here.. done. easy. no sweat.
The tip calculator is for incredibly cheap people and if you leave a tip that is calculated to decimal then you are leaving behind
more then a tip. You are leaving behind the certificate of assholery![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they let drive people who can not calculate 20% of a number???? What's next, Apple watch instruction how to use a toilet?
Dear friend.. first of all be generous. Never tip less then 20%. Second.. Round up to make it easy.
So if your total is 134.52 then round it up to 150 Bucks.. then one tenth of it is your ten percent.. 15 Bucks.. and now double it..
30 bucks! here.. done. easy. no sweat.
The tip calculator is for incredibly cheap people and if you leave a tip that is calculated to decimal then you are leaving behind
more then a tip. You are leaving behind the certificate of assholery![]()
Your math and grammar are flawed. Please use a calculator and a dictionary.
NP here - please learn the difference between a dictionary and book of grammar.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they let drive people who can not calculate 20% of a number???? What's next, Apple watch instruction how to use a toilet?
Dear friend.. first of all be generous. Never tip less then 20%. Second.. Round up to make it easy.
So if your total is 134.52 then round it up to 150 Bucks.. then one tenth of it is your ten percent.. 15 Bucks.. and now double it..
30 bucks! here.. done. easy. no sweat.
The tip calculator is for incredibly cheap people and if you leave a tip that is calculated to decimal then you are leaving behind
more then a tip. You are leaving behind the certificate of assholery![]()
Your math and grammar are flawed. Please use a calculator and a dictionary.
Anonymous wrote:Do they let drive people who can not calculate 20% of a number???? What's next, Apple watch instruction how to use a toilet?
Dear friend.. first of all be generous. Never tip less then 20%. Second.. Round up to make it easy.
So if your total is 134.52 then round it up to 150 Bucks.. then one tenth of it is your ten percent.. 15 Bucks.. and now double it..
30 bucks! here.. done. easy. no sweat.
The tip calculator is for incredibly cheap people and if you leave a tip that is calculated to decimal then you are leaving behind
more then a tip. You are leaving behind the certificate of assholery![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Move the decimal one place to the left (on the total amount, not pre-tax). Round up, or to the nearest dollar. Multiply by two.
That's it. This is 3rd grade math.
Tipping is on pretax. Do not tip based on the total.
Let's assume you are going out to dinner in a state with a 10% restaurant tax, and are spending $500 on the meal. An expensive dinner. Let's also assume you are tipping 20% (although that's a generous assumption for someone who wants to tip pretax, but whatever).
Can you guess what the difference is tipping 20% pretax v. 20% post tax on a $500 bill?
It's $10.
Similarly, if you have a $100 meal, it if a whole whopping extra $2 to tip post tax.
Don't be cheap.
Np- I tip pretax and 20%. You seem to make a ASSumption about us pre tippers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Move the decimal one place to the left (on the total amount, not pre-tax). Round up, or to the nearest dollar. Multiply by two.
That's it. This is 3rd grade math.
Tipping is on pretax. Do not tip based on the total.
Let's assume you are going out to dinner in a state with a 10% restaurant tax, and are spending $500 on the meal. An expensive dinner. Let's also assume you are tipping 20% (although that's a generous assumption for someone who wants to tip pretax, but whatever).
Can you guess what the difference is tipping 20% pretax v. 20% post tax on a $500 bill?
It's $10.
Similarly, if you have a $100 meal, it if a whole whopping extra $2 to tip post tax.
Don't be cheap.
Np- I tip pretax and 20%. You seem to make a ASSumption about us pre tippers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Move the decimal one place to the left (on the total amount, not pre-tax). Round up, or to the nearest dollar. Multiply by two.
That's it. This is 3rd grade math.
Tipping is on pretax. Do not tip based on the total.
Let's assume you are going out to dinner in a state with a 10% restaurant tax, and are spending $500 on the meal. An expensive dinner. Let's also assume you are tipping 20% (although that's a generous assumption for someone who wants to tip pretax, but whatever).
Can you guess what the difference is tipping 20% pretax v. 20% post tax on a $500 bill?
It's $10.
Similarly, if you have a $100 meal, it if a whole whopping extra $2 to tip post tax.
Don't be cheap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Move the decimal one place to the left (on the total amount, not pre-tax). Round up, or to the nearest dollar. Multiply by two.
That's it. This is 3rd grade math.
Tipping is on pretax. Do not tip based on the total.
Let's assume you are going out to dinner in a state with a 10% restaurant tax, and are spending $500 on the meal. An expensive dinner. Let's also assume you are tipping 20% (although that's a generous assumption for someone who wants to tip pretax, but whatever).
Can you guess what the difference is tipping 20% pretax v. 20% post tax on a $500 bill?
It's $10.
Similarly, if you have a $100 meal, it if a whole whopping extra $2 to tip post tax.
Don't be cheap.
Doesn’t really matter. The tax imposed factors zero into tipping. Never has. Never will.
Anonymous wrote:how do you even get the calculator on your watch! I have a new iwatch, and the app didn't synch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Move the decimal one place to the left (on the total amount, not pre-tax). Round up, or to the nearest dollar. Multiply by two.
That's it. This is 3rd grade math.
Tipping is on pretax. Do not tip based on the total.
Let's assume you are going out to dinner in a state with a 10% restaurant tax, and are spending $500 on the meal. An expensive dinner. Let's also assume you are tipping 20% (although that's a generous assumption for someone who wants to tip pretax, but whatever).
Can you guess what the difference is tipping 20% pretax v. 20% post tax on a $500 bill?
It's $10.
Similarly, if you have a $100 meal, it if a whole whopping extra $2 to tip post tax.
Don't be cheap.