• Nick
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    159 months ago

    It’s usually very small, but here, prices must also show how much 100g/100ml of something costs

    • @ccunning@lemmy.world
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      59 months ago

      Where is “here” approximately?

      In the U.S. retailers are notorious for having the “unit” price of similar items being listed as (for example) $1.57/oz in one case and $2.23/count in another.

      • ChihuahuaOfDoom
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        39 months ago

        Exactly this, they will put $/oz next to $/unit next to $/lb. It’s infuriating but I still take the time to do the math.

      • @fidodo@lemmy.world
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        49 months ago

        At least in California in grocery stores they always have a per weight tag too. Problem is that it’s not always the same weight…

        • lad
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          29 months ago

          California also has the benefit of being able to choose the more confusing convenient unit, i.e. showing price in $/ounce, $/lb, $/kg, k$/stone, ounces of gold/handful, etc.

      • GHOSCHT
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        49 months ago

        Not sure where that commenter is from, but it’s the case for Germany. Pretty useful to compare

      • Nick
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        19 months ago

        Well, since my instance is local I can just as well say that it’s Switzerland. Apparently it’s mandatory to label proces in a specific way. So far, I’ve never encountered the case that I wasn’t able to compare those prices between products of the same category.

      • @bstix@feddit.dk
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        89 months ago

        EU has a directive about it. Prices must be shown in the proper unit, including all taxes and any “before” price if it’s on “sale”.

        • lad
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          49 months ago

          Do they happen to make this kind of sales, too? sale sign but the old price is lower

          I once had a chance to tell our local pub that their Chinese New Year sale sign is incorrect. They decided to put the sign in Chinese but got confused over how the discount is written in Chinese, so they wrote a price of +50% instead of -15%.

          but why?

          In Chinese the sale price is stated as the remaining part of the original, and it is written in tens of percents (折), so the full price is 10折, and 15% discount is 8.5折, but they had a sign of 15折. Google translate seems to think 15折 = 8.5折 but I would guess that it’s just AI outsmarting itself again. Now, a real person would probably be able to guess what was meant anyway, but it’s nice to write things correctly and not rely on guesswork

          • @bstix@feddit.dk
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            39 months ago

            The specific rules are implemented in local laws, so it probably varies a bit from country to country, but generally it’s illegal to market something as a special offer unless it actually is cheaper than before. The sign says “save more”, which would be misleading marketing.

            There are other ways to work around it though. For instance by alternating between two similar products biweekly, or simply by not having that specific product before Black Friday, making it appear like a special offer even if it’s sold at full price.

            • lad
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              19 months ago

              Thanks for the info, I will now know of more schemes to try to avoid.

    • @perviouslyiner@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Then you get shops like M&S where all the expensive varieties of (for example) tomato are £/kg and the cheap ones are £/unit so you can’t see the big price gap.

      • lad
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        79 months ago

        Nah, in places where you’re obliged to put the price/kg on display that would be illegal. But writing a price per unit in LARGE font and adding a really small price per kilo would be a legal, albeit shitty, move