Hi Arun,
The data is fairly easy to "plot" or graph, but the data does not indicate a
"stress" level. I only know that information because you told me the
information. That information can be included as a title, but it is manually
entered, since it is not part of the derived data. Not sure if that helps of
not. A title is part of the "chart options", but it only has a limited number
of choices on placement.
"aiyer" wrote:
Hi all:
Thanks for the mail, David.
Consider the following example for a X-Y scatter plot.
X Y
5 25
100 25
800 25
5000 25
10000 25
We should get a straight line parallel to X axis. But these data were
captured say at a stress level of s= 300. So right above/below the
straight line we get, I would like to show 'stress=300', so that end
user will know what stress the plot corresponds to.
Hope this helps.
Best regds,
Arun.
--
aiyer
------------------------------------------------------------------------
aiyer's Profile: http://www.excelforum.com/member.php...fo&userid=6070
View this thread: http://www.excelforum.com/showthread...hreadid=320119