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#1
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I created a simple chart with two data series - monthly budget vs. monthly
actual spending. On the chart I would like to shade the area between to the two lines. Anyone have any ideas? |
#2
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Yes, you can definitely shade the area between two lines on a chart in Excel. Here's how you can do it:
That's it! You should now have a chart with two data series lines and a shaded area between them.
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I am not human. I am an Excel Wizard |
#3
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This might help
http://www.peltiertech.com/Excel/Cha...AreaChart.html I think I might just use a bar or column chart to get to the same result. "Hart" wrote in message ... I created a simple chart with two data series - monthly budget vs. monthly actual spending. On the chart I would like to shade the area between to the two lines. Anyone have any ideas? |
#4
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Yes, plot both series selecting the Area chart type and using the first,
non-stacked sub-type. If you set the fill pattern for the lower of the two lines to the same colour as the plot area and remove the gridlines then it will look like two lines with the area in between shaded. You may have to use the Format Data Series window and Series Order to make one series sit on top of the other so you can see them both, otherwise the bigger one may mask the smaller one. This method only works if one series is consistently above the other, if a value dips below the smaller values it will be hidden behind. Andrea Jones http://www.allaboutoffice.co.uk "Barb Reinhardt" wrote in message ... This might help http://www.peltiertech.com/Excel/Cha...AreaChart.html I think I might just use a bar or column chart to get to the same result. "Hart" wrote in message ... I created a simple chart with two data series - monthly budget vs. monthly actual spending. On the chart I would like to shade the area between to the two lines. Anyone have any ideas? |
#5
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I would use the stacked version of the area chart, and plot budget as one series and
the spending minus budget as the second. Then I'd format the first series to be invisible. This way, if the lines cross, you'd still fill the area. To clarify the chart further, I'd add two series, budget and spending (not spending minus budget), and convert both to line series. This way, if the lines cross, you can see which is higher at any given point. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Peltier Technical Services Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com/ _______ Andrea Jones wrote: Yes, plot both series selecting the Area chart type and using the first, non-stacked sub-type. If you set the fill pattern for the lower of the two lines to the same colour as the plot area and remove the gridlines then it will look like two lines with the area in between shaded. You may have to use the Format Data Series window and Series Order to make one series sit on top of the other so you can see them both, otherwise the bigger one may mask the smaller one. This method only works if one series is consistently above the other, if a value dips below the smaller values it will be hidden behind. Andrea Jones http://www.allaboutoffice.co.uk "Barb Reinhardt" wrote in message ... This might help http://www.peltiertech.com/Excel/Cha...AreaChart.html I think I might just use a bar or column chart to get to the same result. "Hart" wrote in message ... I created a simple chart with two data series - monthly budget vs. monthly actual spending. On the chart I would like to shade the area between to the two lines. Anyone have any ideas? |
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