Even when you make it easy for them (which just makes it harder, it seems). Then again, if they’re smart enough to make change these days then they can easily get a better job.
For me it would sting a lot more to reward the ‘strategic incompetence’ than donating a little of my time to help him to calculate and find that exact change.
Most of these round up orgs I’ve never heard of, ask the cashier if she’d roundup your change for your Help Me From Having To Choose Between Food Or Medicine Org.
The cash register will tell the cashier how much change to give.I bought some salad ingredients and my bill came to $6.32. I gave the cashier $7.07 to get back 3 quarters. She gave me 68 cents because she punched in $7.00 instead of $7.07.
I remember, way back in the olden days when they taught math each year while in grade school. I even got advance math during high school. Addition and subtraction were easy.
Making change is not a matter of subtraction; it’s addition.
You add enough pennies to get to the next nickel, enough nickels to get to the next dime, enough dimes to get to the next quarter, enough quarters to get to the next dollars, enough dollars to get to the next 5, enough 5s to get to the next 10 and enough 10s to get to the next 20.
I don’t mind that so much as the automatic assumption that the minimum I want to tip is 15% for handing me a bag. I have gotten to the point where I hit the tab other amount, then enter 0.00
Yeah, this seems to be the gripe of the current age, cash registers constantly asking for extra for whatever, I think some folks took the wrong lessons from Covid don’t you ??? Happy Monday ! ;-)
A friend was the manager at a convenience store. She typically had $80 to $100 extra in the tills when she balanced them each day. Her clerks weren’t real good at making change.
When I was promoted to a checker in 1977 we had manual cash registers so you had to know how much change to give back to a customer even if they decide in the last second to give you a partial coin change – pennies for example so they don’t end up with more pennies. I’ve done that to the cashiers after the register said X amount of change back and they almost always have a deer in the headlights look when I do LOL pretty much explains why America’s K12 students rank 27th or worse in Math worldwide.
For years I ran restaurants then trained management, then wrote training manuals. I made sure I had a class going on how to make change. Of course this was “pre-computer” days and people actually had to think for themselves. Even today if I give a clerk change, I’ll tell them how much to give me back and in what denominations.
Ratkin Premium Member 2 days ago
An ungodly large number of people.
C 2 days ago
No, no I wouldn’t
KA7DRE Premium Member 2 days ago
I’ve ran into many people who don’t know what a “C” note is.
Cactus-Pete 2 days ago
Even when you make it easy for them (which just makes it harder, it seems). Then again, if they’re smart enough to make change these days then they can easily get a better job.
BaronBosse 2 days ago
For me it would sting a lot more to reward the ‘strategic incompetence’ than donating a little of my time to help him to calculate and find that exact change.
Jayalexander 2 days ago
Most of these round up orgs I’ve never heard of, ask the cashier if she’d roundup your change for your Help Me From Having To Choose Between Food Or Medicine Org.
RobinHood 1 day ago
What’s that in his hand?
rdav1248961 Premium Member 1 day ago
The cash register will tell the cashier how much change to give.I bought some salad ingredients and my bill came to $6.32. I gave the cashier $7.07 to get back 3 quarters. She gave me 68 cents because she punched in $7.00 instead of $7.07.
Gent 1 day ago
What no Google Pay?
PoochFan 1 day ago
They are the ones who can’t do it unless the cash register tells them the amount.
derdave969 1 day ago
Where’s his tip jar?
Ned Snipes 1 day ago
I’ve given the exact amount to some younger cashier, they stand there looking at it for a while just dumbfounded.
The Orange Mailman 1 day ago
What happens with the money? Education? Equipment?
njchris 1 day ago
Now that is not only funny but (alas) very true
akachman Premium Member 1 day ago
Yes…please. Not in my skill set.
Huckleberry Hiroshima 1 day ago
No thanks. How about you round down.
landyk 1 day ago
I remember, way back in the olden days when they taught math each year while in grade school. I even got advance math during high school. Addition and subtraction were easy.
dflak 1 day ago
Making change is not a matter of subtraction; it’s addition.
You add enough pennies to get to the next nickel, enough nickels to get to the next dime, enough dimes to get to the next quarter, enough quarters to get to the next dollars, enough dollars to get to the next 5, enough 5s to get to the next 10 and enough 10s to get to the next 20.
Broacher 1 day ago
I give this comic 4.63 stars!
Munch 1 day ago
I remember when you could just pay for something and leave and not play 20 questions with a machine.
Doug K 1 day ago
How about round down and the cashier gets to make up the difference?
kjnrun 1 day ago
Boy, isn’t this the truth!
EMGULS79 1 day ago
Ha-ha, nice try!
ladykat 1 day ago
No.
TMMILLER Premium Member 1 day ago
I don’t mind that so much as the automatic assumption that the minimum I want to tip is 15% for handing me a bag. I have gotten to the point where I hit the tab other amount, then enter 0.00
Spacetech 1 day ago
Stupid is a Stupid Does
patiodragon 1 day ago
I see PANIC in their eyes when handed cash!
sdjamieson Premium Member 1 day ago
Isn’t making change almost an obsolete skill these days, like taking shorthand or changing a typewriter ribbon?
Lennia Machen Premium Member 1 day ago
Making change? Who uses cash anymore?
lnrokr55 1 day ago
Yeah, this seems to be the gripe of the current age, cash registers constantly asking for extra for whatever, I think some folks took the wrong lessons from Covid don’t you ??? Happy Monday ! ;-)
Bill The Nuke 1 day ago
A friend was the manager at a convenience store. She typically had $80 to $100 extra in the tills when she balanced them each day. Her clerks weren’t real good at making change.
coffeeturtle 1 day ago
bingo!
Smeagol 1 day ago
When I was promoted to a checker in 1977 we had manual cash registers so you had to know how much change to give back to a customer even if they decide in the last second to give you a partial coin change – pennies for example so they don’t end up with more pennies. I’ve done that to the cashiers after the register said X amount of change back and they almost always have a deer in the headlights look when I do LOL pretty much explains why America’s K12 students rank 27th or worse in Math worldwide.
namelocdet 1 day ago
That foundation has a WHOLE lot of members now-a-days..
PAR85 1 day ago
Most cashiers these days can’t do it without a calculator.
jpozenel 1 day ago
And people complain about self-checkout aisles. Go figure.
wrenchmonkeyinparadise 1 day ago
Giving change by counting upwards is a lost art.
macmantoo 1 day ago
For years I ran restaurants then trained management, then wrote training manuals. I made sure I had a class going on how to make change. Of course this was “pre-computer” days and people actually had to think for themselves. Even today if I give a clerk change, I’ll tell them how much to give me back and in what denominations.
fgerbil46 1 day ago
The reality of this cartoon staggers the mind!