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Widening Columns in Chart
Help. I am creating a chart that shows quantity (in whole numbers) for
several different data sets per week in columns. The x axis is supposed to be in weekly intervals. If I do not include the cells with the weeks listed in my x axis labels field in the "Source Data", my columns look great - nice and wide, easy to see. Once I select my cells with my dates in them, the columns get very skinny. I tried changing the gap and the overlap, with no success. Help! How can I get my columns to look nice and wide, and still have my weeks listed in my x axis?? |
Widening Columns in Chart
The time scale axis has no Weeks setting. If Excel recognizes your dates as
dates, it will use Days instead, so for each weekly data point you will have one column and six spaces, hence your thin columns. Change the time scale axis to a regular category axis by going to Chart menu Chart Options Axes, and selecting Category under Category (X) Axis. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "Hoosierquilt" wrote in message ... Help. I am creating a chart that shows quantity (in whole numbers) for several different data sets per week in columns. The x axis is supposed to be in weekly intervals. If I do not include the cells with the weeks listed in my x axis labels field in the "Source Data", my columns look great - nice and wide, easy to see. Once I select my cells with my dates in them, the columns get very skinny. I tried changing the gap and the overlap, with no success. Help! How can I get my columns to look nice and wide, and still have my weeks listed in my x axis?? |
Widening Columns in Chart
BRILLIANT. That did it, Jon, egads, why didn't **I** think of that. I chose
all the other selections. Who would of guessed it (not me). Okay, another question on the same damned chart: I am trying to plot some differing data (ergo, a secondary axis, that much I know). My first data points as I mentioned are whole numbers (I run a call center, and I'm looking at total incoming calls, total outbound calls, and Ave. answer time in seconds). So, the third data set is in seconds, not whole numbers. I've got my secondary Y axis selected, chosen a line graph, set the secondary y axis in seconds, and I've captured all my weeks worth of ave. answer times in seconds over the weeks, but all the data points read as zero. The nice little pink line is laying flat on the x axis. When I float my mouse over the data points, they all read as zero. How do I get my nice little line to follow the secondary y axis on the right side of the chart? "Jon Peltier" wrote: The time scale axis has no Weeks setting. If Excel recognizes your dates as dates, it will use Days instead, so for each weekly data point you will have one column and six spaces, hence your thin columns. Change the time scale axis to a regular category axis by going to Chart menu Chart Options Axes, and selecting Category under Category (X) Axis. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "Hoosierquilt" wrote in message ... Help. I am creating a chart that shows quantity (in whole numbers) for several different data sets per week in columns. The x axis is supposed to be in weekly intervals. If I do not include the cells with the weeks listed in my x axis labels field in the "Source Data", my columns look great - nice and wide, easy to see. Once I select my cells with my dates in them, the columns get very skinny. I tried changing the gap and the overlap, with no success. Help! How can I get my columns to look nice and wide, and still have my weeks listed in my x axis?? |
Widening Columns in Chart
These points read zero, but they're not zero?
To get a series onto secondary axes (and to add secondary axes if they aren't yet present) you double click the series, and on the Axis tab, choose Secondary. How are your seconds defined in the worksheet? Are they times, formatted something like hh:mm:ss or mm:ss or [s]? Your secondary axis should be formatted the same. If the axis is formatted as whole numbers, the seconds would appear as zeros, since one second is 0.000011574 days (i.e., 86,400 seconds per day). - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "Hoosierquilt" wrote in message ... BRILLIANT. That did it, Jon, egads, why didn't **I** think of that. I chose all the other selections. Who would of guessed it (not me). Okay, another question on the same damned chart: I am trying to plot some differing data (ergo, a secondary axis, that much I know). My first data points as I mentioned are whole numbers (I run a call center, and I'm looking at total incoming calls, total outbound calls, and Ave. answer time in seconds). So, the third data set is in seconds, not whole numbers. I've got my secondary Y axis selected, chosen a line graph, set the secondary y axis in seconds, and I've captured all my weeks worth of ave. answer times in seconds over the weeks, but all the data points read as zero. The nice little pink line is laying flat on the x axis. When I float my mouse over the data points, they all read as zero. How do I get my nice little line to follow the secondary y axis on the right side of the chart? "Jon Peltier" wrote: The time scale axis has no Weeks setting. If Excel recognizes your dates as dates, it will use Days instead, so for each weekly data point you will have one column and six spaces, hence your thin columns. Change the time scale axis to a regular category axis by going to Chart menu Chart Options Axes, and selecting Category under Category (X) Axis. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "Hoosierquilt" wrote in message ... Help. I am creating a chart that shows quantity (in whole numbers) for several different data sets per week in columns. The x axis is supposed to be in weekly intervals. If I do not include the cells with the weeks listed in my x axis labels field in the "Source Data", my columns look great - nice and wide, easy to see. Once I select my cells with my dates in them, the columns get very skinny. I tried changing the gap and the overlap, with no success. Help! How can I get my columns to look nice and wide, and still have my weeks listed in my x axis?? |
Widening Columns in Chart
That's correct, the values are in seconds, such as :02, :03, :04, etc. up to
about :08 seconds (we're quick to answer our phones). I have the secondary axis checked, and my seconds are defined as time in seconds in the cells (Time=13:30:55). The problem is in defining the secondary axis in seconds. When I open up the "Format Axis" box, the values in the "Scale" tab are numeric. I have the "Number" tab set to Time (13:30 or 13:30:55, it doesn't seem to make a difference), but it's the "Scale" tab that defines the increments, and that's a number, not a time value. Any other suggestions?? "Jon Peltier" wrote: These points read zero, but they're not zero? To get a series onto secondary axes (and to add secondary axes if they aren't yet present) you double click the series, and on the Axis tab, choose Secondary. How are your seconds defined in the worksheet? Are they times, formatted something like hh:mm:ss or mm:ss or [s]? Your secondary axis should be formatted the same. If the axis is formatted as whole numbers, the seconds would appear as zeros, since one second is 0.000011574 days (i.e., 86,400 seconds per day). - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "Hoosierquilt" wrote in message ... BRILLIANT. That did it, Jon, egads, why didn't **I** think of that. I chose all the other selections. Who would of guessed it (not me). Okay, another question on the same damned chart: I am trying to plot some differing data (ergo, a secondary axis, that much I know). My first data points as I mentioned are whole numbers (I run a call center, and I'm looking at total incoming calls, total outbound calls, and Ave. answer time in seconds). So, the third data set is in seconds, not whole numbers. I've got my secondary Y axis selected, chosen a line graph, set the secondary y axis in seconds, and I've captured all my weeks worth of ave. answer times in seconds over the weeks, but all the data points read as zero. The nice little pink line is laying flat on the x axis. When I float my mouse over the data points, they all read as zero. How do I get my nice little line to follow the secondary y axis on the right side of the chart? "Jon Peltier" wrote: The time scale axis has no Weeks setting. If Excel recognizes your dates as dates, it will use Days instead, so for each weekly data point you will have one column and six spaces, hence your thin columns. Change the time scale axis to a regular category axis by going to Chart menu Chart Options Axes, and selecting Category under Category (X) Axis. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "Hoosierquilt" wrote in message ... Help. I am creating a chart that shows quantity (in whole numbers) for several different data sets per week in columns. The x axis is supposed to be in weekly intervals. If I do not include the cells with the weeks listed in my x axis labels field in the "Source Data", my columns look great - nice and wide, easy to see. Once I select my cells with my dates in them, the columns get very skinny. I tried changing the gap and the overlap, with no success. Help! How can I get my columns to look nice and wide, and still have my weeks listed in my x axis?? |
Widening Columns in Chart
If you're not using Excel 2007, you can enter the axis scale parameters in
convenient formats, like 0:00:10 for ten seconds or 1:00 for one hour. When you revisit the dialog, Excel will have converted the time values into their decimal equivalents. Excel 2007's dialogs unfortunately do not recognize entries with these formats. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "Hoosierquilt" wrote in message ... That's correct, the values are in seconds, such as :02, :03, :04, etc. up to about :08 seconds (we're quick to answer our phones). I have the secondary axis checked, and my seconds are defined as time in seconds in the cells (Time=13:30:55). The problem is in defining the secondary axis in seconds. When I open up the "Format Axis" box, the values in the "Scale" tab are numeric. I have the "Number" tab set to Time (13:30 or 13:30:55, it doesn't seem to make a difference), but it's the "Scale" tab that defines the increments, and that's a number, not a time value. Any other suggestions?? "Jon Peltier" wrote: These points read zero, but they're not zero? To get a series onto secondary axes (and to add secondary axes if they aren't yet present) you double click the series, and on the Axis tab, choose Secondary. How are your seconds defined in the worksheet? Are they times, formatted something like hh:mm:ss or mm:ss or [s]? Your secondary axis should be formatted the same. If the axis is formatted as whole numbers, the seconds would appear as zeros, since one second is 0.000011574 days (i.e., 86,400 seconds per day). - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "Hoosierquilt" wrote in message ... BRILLIANT. That did it, Jon, egads, why didn't **I** think of that. I chose all the other selections. Who would of guessed it (not me). Okay, another question on the same damned chart: I am trying to plot some differing data (ergo, a secondary axis, that much I know). My first data points as I mentioned are whole numbers (I run a call center, and I'm looking at total incoming calls, total outbound calls, and Ave. answer time in seconds). So, the third data set is in seconds, not whole numbers. I've got my secondary Y axis selected, chosen a line graph, set the secondary y axis in seconds, and I've captured all my weeks worth of ave. answer times in seconds over the weeks, but all the data points read as zero. The nice little pink line is laying flat on the x axis. When I float my mouse over the data points, they all read as zero. How do I get my nice little line to follow the secondary y axis on the right side of the chart? "Jon Peltier" wrote: The time scale axis has no Weeks setting. If Excel recognizes your dates as dates, it will use Days instead, so for each weekly data point you will have one column and six spaces, hence your thin columns. Change the time scale axis to a regular category axis by going to Chart menu Chart Options Axes, and selecting Category under Category (X) Axis. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "Hoosierquilt" wrote in message ... Help. I am creating a chart that shows quantity (in whole numbers) for several different data sets per week in columns. The x axis is supposed to be in weekly intervals. If I do not include the cells with the weeks listed in my x axis labels field in the "Source Data", my columns look great - nice and wide, easy to see. Once I select my cells with my dates in them, the columns get very skinny. I tried changing the gap and the overlap, with no success. Help! How can I get my columns to look nice and wide, and still have my weeks listed in my x axis?? |
Widening Columns in Chart
Nope, Exel 2003. Okay, I have two issues: Getting the scale values typed in
correctly, so the secondary x axis will read, ":00, :01, :02... to :08, AND formatting the cells with the correct number/time selection (still showing as zeros). In trying to define the scale values for the secondary x axis, I entered 0:00:10 as the max value, and 0:00:01 for both the major and minor unit. Not sure what to place checks by, as MS Exel is slim in their explanation of how the scale values work, very frustrating. So, Jon, if you would extend your patience to one last reply, if you can help me define the numeric values in my cells properly, and set the scale values on the secondary x axis with me, I think I could actually get this stupid chart to demonstrate what I want. Thanks! Patty "Jon Peltier" wrote: If you're not using Excel 2007, you can enter the axis scale parameters in convenient formats, like 0:00:10 for ten seconds or 1:00 for one hour. When you revisit the dialog, Excel will have converted the time values into their decimal equivalents. Excel 2007's dialogs unfortunately do not recognize entries with these formats. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "Hoosierquilt" wrote in message ... That's correct, the values are in seconds, such as :02, :03, :04, etc. up to about :08 seconds (we're quick to answer our phones). I have the secondary axis checked, and my seconds are defined as time in seconds in the cells (Time=13:30:55). The problem is in defining the secondary axis in seconds. When I open up the "Format Axis" box, the values in the "Scale" tab are numeric. I have the "Number" tab set to Time (13:30 or 13:30:55, it doesn't seem to make a difference), but it's the "Scale" tab that defines the increments, and that's a number, not a time value. Any other suggestions?? "Jon Peltier" wrote: These points read zero, but they're not zero? To get a series onto secondary axes (and to add secondary axes if they aren't yet present) you double click the series, and on the Axis tab, choose Secondary. How are your seconds defined in the worksheet? Are they times, formatted something like hh:mm:ss or mm:ss or [s]? Your secondary axis should be formatted the same. If the axis is formatted as whole numbers, the seconds would appear as zeros, since one second is 0.000011574 days (i.e., 86,400 seconds per day). - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "Hoosierquilt" wrote in message ... BRILLIANT. That did it, Jon, egads, why didn't **I** think of that. I chose all the other selections. Who would of guessed it (not me). Okay, another question on the same damned chart: I am trying to plot some differing data (ergo, a secondary axis, that much I know). My first data points as I mentioned are whole numbers (I run a call center, and I'm looking at total incoming calls, total outbound calls, and Ave. answer time in seconds). So, the third data set is in seconds, not whole numbers. I've got my secondary Y axis selected, chosen a line graph, set the secondary y axis in seconds, and I've captured all my weeks worth of ave. answer times in seconds over the weeks, but all the data points read as zero. The nice little pink line is laying flat on the x axis. When I float my mouse over the data points, they all read as zero. How do I get my nice little line to follow the secondary y axis on the right side of the chart? "Jon Peltier" wrote: The time scale axis has no Weeks setting. If Excel recognizes your dates as dates, it will use Days instead, so for each weekly data point you will have one column and six spaces, hence your thin columns. Change the time scale axis to a regular category axis by going to Chart menu Chart Options Axes, and selecting Category under Category (X) Axis. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "Hoosierquilt" wrote in message ... Help. I am creating a chart that shows quantity (in whole numbers) for several different data sets per week in columns. The x axis is supposed to be in weekly intervals. If I do not include the cells with the weeks listed in my x axis labels field in the "Source Data", my columns look great - nice and wide, easy to see. Once I select my cells with my dates in them, the columns get very skinny. I tried changing the gap and the overlap, with no success. Help! How can I get my columns to look nice and wide, and still have my weeks listed in my x axis?? |
Widening Columns in Chart
If you check the boxes marked Auto, Excel will automatically determine your
axis parameters. Notice if you enter a value in one of the boxes, the box unchecks itself. So don't check any boxes where you've entered values. Your number format should be :ss What do the cells look like? (Paste a sample of the values in a reply.) Format the cells so Horizontal Alignment is General: are the values left or right aligned within the cells. If left aligned, then they are text and must be converted. To convert, copy a blank cell, select the cells to be converted, go to Edit menu Paste Special, and choose Operation: Add. If this doesn't convert the values, then you have work to do. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "Hoosierquilt" wrote in message ... Nope, Exel 2003. Okay, I have two issues: Getting the scale values typed in correctly, so the secondary x axis will read, ":00, :01, :02... to :08, AND formatting the cells with the correct number/time selection (still showing as zeros). In trying to define the scale values for the secondary x axis, I entered 0:00:10 as the max value, and 0:00:01 for both the major and minor unit. Not sure what to place checks by, as MS Exel is slim in their explanation of how the scale values work, very frustrating. So, Jon, if you would extend your patience to one last reply, if you can help me define the numeric values in my cells properly, and set the scale values on the secondary x axis with me, I think I could actually get this stupid chart to demonstrate what I want. Thanks! Patty "Jon Peltier" wrote: If you're not using Excel 2007, you can enter the axis scale parameters in convenient formats, like 0:00:10 for ten seconds or 1:00 for one hour. When you revisit the dialog, Excel will have converted the time values into their decimal equivalents. Excel 2007's dialogs unfortunately do not recognize entries with these formats. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "Hoosierquilt" wrote in message ... That's correct, the values are in seconds, such as :02, :03, :04, etc. up to about :08 seconds (we're quick to answer our phones). I have the secondary axis checked, and my seconds are defined as time in seconds in the cells (Time=13:30:55). The problem is in defining the secondary axis in seconds. When I open up the "Format Axis" box, the values in the "Scale" tab are numeric. I have the "Number" tab set to Time (13:30 or 13:30:55, it doesn't seem to make a difference), but it's the "Scale" tab that defines the increments, and that's a number, not a time value. Any other suggestions?? "Jon Peltier" wrote: These points read zero, but they're not zero? To get a series onto secondary axes (and to add secondary axes if they aren't yet present) you double click the series, and on the Axis tab, choose Secondary. How are your seconds defined in the worksheet? Are they times, formatted something like hh:mm:ss or mm:ss or [s]? Your secondary axis should be formatted the same. If the axis is formatted as whole numbers, the seconds would appear as zeros, since one second is 0.000011574 days (i.e., 86,400 seconds per day). - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "Hoosierquilt" wrote in message ... BRILLIANT. That did it, Jon, egads, why didn't **I** think of that. I chose all the other selections. Who would of guessed it (not me). Okay, another question on the same damned chart: I am trying to plot some differing data (ergo, a secondary axis, that much I know). My first data points as I mentioned are whole numbers (I run a call center, and I'm looking at total incoming calls, total outbound calls, and Ave. answer time in seconds). So, the third data set is in seconds, not whole numbers. I've got my secondary Y axis selected, chosen a line graph, set the secondary y axis in seconds, and I've captured all my weeks worth of ave. answer times in seconds over the weeks, but all the data points read as zero. The nice little pink line is laying flat on the x axis. When I float my mouse over the data points, they all read as zero. How do I get my nice little line to follow the secondary y axis on the right side of the chart? "Jon Peltier" wrote: The time scale axis has no Weeks setting. If Excel recognizes your dates as dates, it will use Days instead, so for each weekly data point you will have one column and six spaces, hence your thin columns. Change the time scale axis to a regular category axis by going to Chart menu Chart Options Axes, and selecting Category under Category (X) Axis. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "Hoosierquilt" wrote in message ... Help. I am creating a chart that shows quantity (in whole numbers) for several different data sets per week in columns. The x axis is supposed to be in weekly intervals. If I do not include the cells with the weeks listed in my x axis labels field in the "Source Data", my columns look great - nice and wide, easy to see. Once I select my cells with my dates in them, the columns get very skinny. I tried changing the gap and the overlap, with no success. Help! How can I get my columns to look nice and wide, and still have my weeks listed in my x axis?? |
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