I agree with peeled_turtle that it would be time-consuming working it all out. But if this is for a class, they usually won't start getting into stuff like 3.9%. The charts I've seen have maybe 10 columns and rows, listing amounts like 10%, 15%, 20%, etc. They'll even combine 10/15 in a column and then have say 20 down the left so that you can find that combination.
I think it's actually a pain even using those charts, since it's easy to do on a calculator quickly if you're practiced at it. And I think it would be even more of a pain to make a chart in Excel. Since they all work exactly alike, you only have to know how to do one thing, and then do that thing every time. If this was for someone's job and they had common combinations they used, it might be worth the time to make a chart that could be used for years.
Back to the original poster, I was not able to find anything and really didn't think my chances were very good. I did find a place where they had some example chapters from some textbooks, but there was very little and didn't contain anything like that. If this is for class and you're not allowed to use such a chart on a test, it won't really help you in the long-run anyway.
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