For one-way slabs we specify how many kips/ft of post tensioning we need. For beams we specify the total force. For two-way slabs we specify kips/ft in the uniform direction and we specify the total force in the banded direction. Let the p.t. supplier figure out how many tendons are required. The number of tendons will depend on the final effective force per tendon and that value varies depending on the length of the pull, whether or not the tendons will be pulled at one or both ends, the amount of drape, shrinkage of the concrete and several other variables that the p.t. supplier will account for when figuring out the final effective force. Slab tendons are usually grouped in bundles of 2 to 4 tendons. If you specify a tendon force of 25k/ft and the effective force of the tendons is 25k then you will not get one tendon per foot. You will most likely get four tendons grouped together every four feet. If you don't do too much p.t. design then you should have someone who knows p.t. design the floor for you or supervise and train you.