Charts are visually appealing and make it easy for users to see comparisons, patterns, and trends in data. Rather than having to analyze several columns of worksheet numbers, you can see at a glance whether sales are falling or rising over quarterly periods or how actual sales compare to projected sales. Learn to manipulate your Excel chart by turning it into another type of chart, adding colors, or using it in another Microsoft application.
Outline - PDF
- Creating Charts
- Formatting Numbers in a Chart
- Combination Charts
- Secondary Axis
- About Using Dates in Charts
- Display of Dates
- Time-scale Charts and Times
- Data Marker and Major Gridline
- Category Names and Chart Data Series Names
- Embedded Charts and Chart Sheets
- Column, Bar, Line, Area, Surface or Radar
- Pies, Doughnut, XY Scatter and Bubble Charts
- Stock Charts
- Plot Data Series from Worksheet Rows or Columns
- Reverse the Plotting Order of Categories, Values, or Series
- Change the Plotting Order of Data Series
- Embedded Charts
- Printing Charts
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