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Analysing time and days patterns in a chart
Hi there
What do you think would be best chart format to analyse some data that consists of: Date of Call out Day of call out Time Of Call out Call out Reference I am trying to see if there is any pattern in the days & times of call outs to improve rosters. Basically I want the time of callout & day of week mapped across dates/months to see any trends. For example if Fridays at 1am are a recurring callout time (after the pub!) or every other Friday etc. Do yo uthink Pivot tabe and charts is relevant or can normal chart provide me with the results? Many thanks |
Analysing time and days patterns in a chart
I have the same task. I would like to plot both date and time on the x-axis
to track deviations in data over time. My problem is I have the date and the time in two different columns foor the incoming data. How can I make these to variables appear in the same cell? Christina "Raja" wrote: Hi there What do you think would be best chart format to analyse some data that consists of: Date of Call out Day of call out Time Of Call out Call out Reference I am trying to see if there is any pattern in the days & times of call outs to improve rosters. Basically I want the time of callout & day of week mapped across dates/months to see any trends. For example if Fridays at 1am are a recurring callout time (after the pub!) or every other Friday etc. Do yo uthink Pivot tabe and charts is relevant or can normal chart provide me with the results? Many thanks |
Analysing time and days patterns in a chart
On Tue, 22 Jan 2008, in microsoft.public.excel.charting,
Christina said: I have the same task. I would like to plot both date and time on the x-axis to track deviations in data over time. My problem is I have the date and the time in two different columns foor the incoming data. How can I make these to variables appear in the same cell? Dates are stored in Excel as whole numbers, and times as fractions of a whole number. If you ensure that your dates are integers (i.e. there is no time in them) and your times are always less than one (i.e. there is no date information in them), then you can create a combined date and time simply by adding the two numbers. Examples: Number Date or time Date and time 0.425 10:12 10:12 00 Jan 1900 39470 23/01/2008 00:00 23 Jan 2008 39470.425 23/01/2008 10:12 23 Jan 2008 Notice how the time appears to be on the "date" the noughth of January 1900. This is the starting point of the Excel calendar system. Today it has been 39,470 days since then. Now you can use the full number in a scatter (XY) chart to graph your dates and times. Sadly, you can't use line charts, even with the "Timeline" axis option, because timelines for some reason only operate as integers, i.e. whole days, no times. However, you can very easily format scatter series with lines, so that's not a problem. -- Del Cotter NB Personal replies to this post will send email to , which goes to a spam folder-- please send your email to del3 instead. |
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