Calculator

  1. Simple Calculator
  2. Percentage Change Calculator
  3. Math Calculator
  4. Home Equity Line of Credit Calculator


Download: Calculator
Size: 61.77 MB

Simple Calculator

The most simple mathematical operations: addition, subtraction, multiplication, division. This is a simplified version of the online calculator. The full version you can get and use here: Entering commands from the keyboard For the work of the simple calculator You can use both ordinary numeric buttons above the keyboard and separate numeric buttons on the right. You can use the [Enter] key to enter the equal character. To delete the last character, press the [Backspace] (arrow) key. To enter a plus sign, use the [+] key at the top or on the side numeric keypad. To enter a minus sign, use the [-] key at the top or on the side numeric keypad. Use the [*] key on the side numeric keypad to enter the multiplication sign. Use the [/] key on the side numeric keypad to enter the division sign. You can use the [Esc] and [Del] keys on top of the keyboard, or the [End] key on the side numeric keypad to reset the calculator.

Percentage Change Calculator

Calculator Use The Percentage Change Calculator (% change calculator) quantifies the change from one number to another and expresses the change as an increase or decrease. This is a % change calculator. Going from 10 apples to 20 apples is a 100% increase (change) in the number of apples. This calculator is used when there is an “old” and “new” number or an “initial” and “final” value. A positive change is an increased amount of the percentage value while a negative change is a decreased amount of the percentage value. Use the percent change calculation when the order of the numbers does matter; you have starting and ending values or an "old number" and a "new number." When you are just comparing two numbers you may want to use the Related calculations can be done with Percentage Change Formula Percentage change equals the change in value divided by the absolute value of the original value, multiplied by 100. \( = -0.25 \times 100 = -25\% \; \text \) If you have a -25% change it's the same as saying you have a 25% decrease. Note that if you let V 1 = 2.625 and V 2 = 3.50 you would get a 33.3333% increase. This is because these percentages refer to different amounts: 25% of 3.50 versus 33.3333% of 2.625. How to Calculate Percentage Change: Example 2 Let's look at a change that includes negative numbers, where taking the absolute value of V 1 in the denominator makes a difference. What is the percentage change, as an increase or decrease, to go from -25 to 25? Let V 1 = -25 ...

Math Calculator

Calculator Use Add, subtract, multiply and divide decimal numbers with this calculator. You can use: • Positive or negative decimals • For negative numbers insert a leading negative or minus sign before your number, like this: -45 or -356.5 • Integers, decimals or scientific notation • For scientific notation use "e" notation like this: -3.5e8 or 4.7E-9 • Rounding. Specify whether you want to round your answer, and how many digits or decimal places to round to. This calculator uses addition, subtraction, multiplication or division for calculations on positive or negative decimal numbers, integers, real numbers and whole numbers. Visit these calculators for calculations on decimal numbers and see the work: • • • •

Home Equity Line of Credit Calculator

Use our home equity line of credit (HELOC) payoff calculator to figure out your monthly payments on your home equity line based on different variables. Use the calculator to learn: • How much interest you’ll pay over the life of your line of credit • What your payments will be, and how much interest you’ll save, if you pay off your line of credit faster • What different interest rates mean for your monthly payment You can input data including payoff goal, current interest rate, yearly rate changes and annual fees. Refinancing your HELOC into a home equity loan HELOC payments tend to get more expensive over time. There are two reasons for this: adjustable rates and entering the repayment phase of the loan. HELOCs are variable-rate loans, which means your interest rate will adjust periodically. In a rising-rate environment, this could mean larger monthly payments. Additionally, once the draw period ends borrowers are responsible for both the principal and interest. This steep rise in the monthly HELOC payment can be a shock to borrowers who were making interest-only payments for the first 10 or 15 years. Sometimes the new HELOC payment can double or even triple what the borrower was paying for the last decade. To save money, borrowers can refinance their HELOC. Here we’ll take a look at two options and how they work. • Home Equity Loan - You can take out a • New HELOC - Apply for a new HELOC to replace the old one. This allows you to avoid that principal and interest payment...

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