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tom zane
 
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Default How do I print comments on a chart?

Mr. Peltier:

Thank you again for your response. I hate to appear a dunce, but I am not
understanding. I seem to be able to make a vertical line by using a Y bar,
but to do that, I simply add another column of "phase changes", and on a
particular month, in that column I had a number, high up on the Y scale. Then
that number is plotted separately on the chart. I then click on that and set
a Y bar at 100%, and the line goes down the graph all the way to the X axis.

However, when I then make another chart using a different set of source
data, that line seems to disappear, even if that particular month is part of
the graph.

Furthermore, I was not clear on what I meant by labeling that phase change.
I didn't mean data label for the data series. I meant a label describing what
the vertical line MEANS. FOr example, on one month, a particular child might
have started a new medication, so I would want that vertical line to be a
graphical statement of a change in the child's program, and then I want a
label, RIGHT ON THE CHART, next to the vertical line, that says "MED CHANGE."
I have been trying to use text boxes, but they don't stay locked to the
particular month when I move to a new source data and the month shifts
position on the graph.

Does this make sense? Thanks again for your time and help.


"Jon Peltier" wrote:

Tom -

Excel remembers that a label goes with point X of a series, so if your data
range still includes the point, but dynamically you've moved it to point Y,
the label stays at X. You need to use a dummy series then for your labels
and phase-change line. I think I would add each phase change line as a
separate one-point series so that the point (no marker) coincides with the
point you want to highlight, and the point anchors the label. Use the label
text as the series title, and it's easier to apply to the point than having
to use one of these addins. Then use Y error bars that will reach down to
the bottom and up to the top of the chart. It's related to this example:

http://peltiertech.com/Excel/Charts/...ertErrBar.html

- Jon
-------
Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP
Peltier Technical Services - Tutorials and Custom Solutions -
http://PeltierTech.com/
2006 Excel User Conference, 19-21 April, Atlantic City, NJ
http://peltiertech.com/Excel/ExcelUserConf06.html
_______

"tom zane" <tom wrote in message
...
Thank you very much, but those two programs are not doing what I need:

I am entering number data per month - For example, January - 10; February
24; March - 3; April - 15; and so on. I do this each month throughout the
year, and I have multiple years entered.

I then construct line charts showing the data across a several-month
period.
It could be one calendar year, or it could be March 2004 through March
2005.

I need to occasionally label ONE month's data; then, whenever i change the
source data for the next chart, that label needs to STICK WITH the
assigned
data point and move with it when the new chart is constructed.

Additionally, I need a (what I call) a phase-change line to be linked to
the
data point and the data label. This line is a vertical line from the data
label at the top of the chart, down through the data point to the x-axis
at
the bottom. And this line needs to be locked (stick with) the data point
and
label as I change the source data for a new chart.

Does this make sense? Can this be done?

"Jon Peltier" wrote:

Put the comments into another column, then use one of these free Excel
add-ins to use these cells to label the points.

Rob Bovey's Chart Labeler,
http://appspro.com
John Walkenbach's Chart Tools, http://j-walk.com

- Jon
-------
Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP
Peltier Technical Services
Tutorials and Custom Solutions
http://PeltierTech.com/
_______


"Tom Z." <Tom wrote in message
...
Using Excel, I have data numbers added in some cells. In those cells, I
have
inserted comments. When printing the chart, I want those comments
printed
next to the plotted data point.

Can that be done? If so, how?