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I am trying to do something that seems like it should be simple with a custom
graph, but in trying to build my own custom graph am not seeing how to really do any customizing. I want to make a 2-axis chart, but instead of 1/2 the series being bars and 1/2 lines, I want to do all bars except for the very last one as a line (4 bars, 1 line). I'm using MS Excel 2000. Thanks for any help! AnnieW |
#2
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Make the chart with five bars, right click the bar series you want as a
line, choose Chart Type, and choose a line type. Then right click on the new line series, select Format, and navigate on the dialog until you have a chance to change the axis to secondary. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions Peltier Technical Services, Inc. - http://PeltierTech.com _______ "AnnieW" wrote in message ... I am trying to do something that seems like it should be simple with a custom graph, but in trying to build my own custom graph am not seeing how to really do any customizing. I want to make a 2-axis chart, but instead of 1/2 the series being bars and 1/2 lines, I want to do all bars except for the very last one as a line (4 bars, 1 line). I'm using MS Excel 2000. Thanks for any help! AnnieW |
#3
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On Fri, 15 Aug 2008, in microsoft.public.excel.charting,
AnnieW said: I want to make a 2-axis chart, but instead of 1/2 the series being bars and 1/2 lines, I want to do all bars except for the very last one as a line (4 bars, 1 line). So-called "combination" charts in Excel are a bit of a racket. They act like they're offering you something special or difficult, but really, every single series is individually customizable, within certain limits. So just make a plain old bar chart, then right-click on the very last series, and change the chart type to a line. You don't need those half bar/half line "special" types. -- 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. |
#4
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![]() "Del Cotter" wrote in message ... On Fri, 15 Aug 2008, in microsoft.public.excel.charting, AnnieW said: I want to make a 2-axis chart, but instead of 1/2 the series being bars and 1/2 lines, I want to do all bars except for the very last one as a line (4 bars, 1 line). So-called "combination" charts in Excel are a bit of a racket. They act like they're offering you something special or difficult, but really, every single series is individually customizable, within certain limits. In fact, the built-in combination charts are less flexible and predictable than a combination chart you make yourself. Suppose you make a built in combo with 2 lines and 2 columns, then you want to add 2 lines. Excel will helpfully make the chart into a 3 line-3 column combo. If you create it yourself from a 4 line series, and change two to columns, then Excel will not be compelled to change what you've already done. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions Peltier Technical Services, Inc. - http://PeltierTech.com _______ |
#5
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On Fri, 15 Aug 2008, in microsoft.public.excel.charting,
Jon Peltier said: "Del Cotter" wrote in message So-called "combination" charts in Excel are a bit of a racket. They act like they're offering you something special or difficult, but really, every single series is individually customizable, within certain limits. In fact, the built-in combination charts are less flexible and predictable than a combination chart you make yourself. Suppose you make a built in combo with 2 lines and 2 columns, then you want to add 2 lines. Excel will helpfully make the chart into a 3 line-3 column combo. If you create it yourself from a 4 line series, and change two to columns, then Excel will not be compelled to change what you've already done. That's terrible, I had no idea they did that. But that's because I never touch the things. -- 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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