| ▲ | dylan604 an hour ago | |||||||
The computers are not dumb. If you do not purchase the correct number of items, the discount is not applied. Also, if you do not have a member/loyalty account, you do not get those discounts. They now have a new level that requires you to have their app for "digital" coupons that are on top of the loyalty prices. There are many times where I don't input my number in until the very end, and then see it calculate all of the deductions. Sometimes it's not much, but I've seen it drop $30 from the "member" price discounts. | ||||||||
| ▲ | foresto 41 minutes ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> The computers are not dumb. Nobody has suggested that they malfunction. I thought this was obvious, but to spell it out: I was suggesting that they might not necessarily be programmed to apply a different price depending on quantity. An item might have a flat price of $1 each, but labeled on the shelf/bin as "special: five for $5" to encourage larger purchases. I have personally encountered this. Meanwhile, I do not recall an example of buying a quantity smaller than suggested and being charged a higher price per item. Hence my question about labeling and law. > Also, if you do not have a member/loyalty account, you do not get those discounts. I'm not talking about membership discounts. | ||||||||
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