नोट
इस पृष्ठ तक पहुंच के लिए प्राधिकरण की आवश्यकता होती है। आप साइन इन करने या निर्देशिकाएँ बदलने का प्रयास कर सकते हैं।
इस पृष्ठ तक पहुंच के लिए प्राधिकरण की आवश्यकता होती है। आप निर्देशिकाएँ बदलने का प्रयास कर सकते हैं।
Applies to:
Calculated column
Calculated table
Measure
Visual calculation
Rounds a number up, away from 0 (zero).
Syntax
ROUNDUP(<number>, <num_digits>)
Parameters
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
number |
A real number that you want to round up. |
num_digits |
The number of digits to which you want to round. A negative value for num_digits rounds to the left of the decimal point; if num_digits is zero or is omitted, number is rounded to the nearest integer. |
Return value
A decimal number.
Remarks
If
num_digitsis greater than 0 (zero), then the number is rounded up to the specified number of decimal places.If
num_digitsis 0, then number is rounded up to the nearest integer.If
num_digitsis less than 0, then number is rounded up to the left of the decimal point.ROUNDUP behaves like ROUND, except that it always rounds a number up.
Example
The following formula rounds Pi to four decimal places. The expected result is 3.1416.
= ROUNDUP(PI(),4)
Example: Decimals as Second Argument
The following formula rounds 1.3 to the nearest multiple of 0.2. The expected result is 2.
= ROUNDUP(1.3,0.2)
Example: Negative Number as Second Argument
The following formula rounds the value in the column, FreightCost, with the expected results shown in the following table:
= ROUNDUP([Values],-1)
When num_digits is less than zero, the number of places to the left of the decimal sign is increased by the value you specify.
| FreightCost | Expected Result |
|---|---|
| 13.25 | 20 |
| 2.45 | 10 |
| 25.56 | 30 |
| 1.34 | 10 |
| 345.01 | 350 |