The following common properties are available for calculations:
Name: Determines the name of the calculation type (this will be displayed in tables if the property Show caption is selected in the main calculation properties).
Dimension: Indicates whether the calculation is Flat or Crossed. This cannot be changed, as it is determined when the calculation type is created.
Type: Allows you to change the underlying calculation type.
Filter: Sets the filter to be used by the calculation.
Level: Sets the analysis level to be used by the calculation.
Weighting: Sets the weighting to be used by the calculation.
Universe: Sets the universe to be used by the calculation.
Hide: Determines if the calculation will be hidden (i.e not displayed in your results).
Use in table: If this option is selected, the calculation will appear in your tables (the option Use the calculation for tables in the main calculation properties changes accordingly).
Use in chart: If this option is selected, the calculation will appear in your charts (the option Use the calculation for charts in the main calculation properties changes accordingly).
Display at the intersection: If selected, the calculation appears at the intersection of rows and columns. This option is available only for crosstab calculations.
Display in rows: If selected, the calculation appears in table rows. This option is available only for crosstab calculations.
Display in columns: If selected, the calculation appears in table columns. This option is available only for crosstab calculations.
Total implicit: If this option is cleared (de-selected), non-contextual totals will be used (i.e. the total will not necessarily correspond to the sum of counts present in the intersection of the cells). The total in row and total in column property categories will be accessible. You can then choose the calculation type, and the custom settings. This option is available only for crosstab calculations.
Run totals in sub level: if this option is selected, flat counts will be retrieved from the child level. This is useful when you want the counts in your table to be based on the data from inside a loop, not at the parent level. For example, if interviews are at the household level, and a loop asks questions about each individual in the household, you might want the counts to be based on individuals, rather than the number of households.