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Excel 2007 Charts Complexity
In Excel 2007 I find the number of charts that can be used overwhelming.
Especially when you click on the drop down menu of which chart to use. Personally, I would think it to be more helpful if you could quickly go through what you want to do step by step. For example if I wanted to do a graph: 2D or 3D, then pie , line, other, then colours. I find especially the part when you actually want to change your colours and setup of a chart confusing. I do admit that the new look is appealing -some might like it some won't but at least you have a choice what look you want. But when I tried to get my percentage values into the diagram I had real trouble doing so. When I specified a certain graph with percentages, some percentages were too small and overlapped. When I dragged them away, the line which pointed to the section of the graph disappeared. When I tried to manually enter some new writing into a specific textbox, excel would not let me do it. Maybe I just have to get used to it and find my way around, but on older versions it was more intuitive and I could quickly change what I wanted (for example click into a textbox and just add for example numbers). That is to say I am not a complete expert on excel but probably better than average and excel did not support the way I wanted to work away - it took me very long to get what I wanted and that surely is not the idea. ---------------- This post is a suggestion for Microsoft, and Microsoft responds to the suggestions with the most votes. To vote for this suggestion, click the "I Agree" button in the message pane. If you do not see the button, follow this link to open the suggestion in the Microsoft Web-based Newsreader and then click "I Agree" in the message pane. http://www.microsoft.com/office/comm...excel.charting |
Excel 2007 Charts Complexity
The whole thing seems to be geared to the inexperienced and really just
seems to make it harder to find all the things you already know you want to use. I understand that they want more people to use more features but they're effectively burying the stuff regular users access all the time. They should come up with an option to use an "experienced" level interface. What I miss most is the hotkey indicators on the menu bar - because there is no menu bar. The shortcuts are still there, so the ones I have completely memorized still work, but I don't have the bootstrap of glancing at the menu/dropdown to make a one-off choice. I guess we'll all learn how to dig out the stuff we need. |
Excel 2007 Charts Complexity
We'll either just have to get used to it, or stick to Excel 2003. (I still
have clients on Excel 2000.) - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions http://PeltierTech.com _______ "ward376" wrote in message oups.com... The whole thing seems to be geared to the inexperienced and really just seems to make it harder to find all the things you already know you want to use. I understand that they want more people to use more features but they're effectively burying the stuff regular users access all the time. They should come up with an option to use an "experienced" level interface. What I miss most is the hotkey indicators on the menu bar - because there is no menu bar. The shortcuts are still there, so the ones I have completely memorized still work, but I don't have the bootstrap of glancing at the menu/dropdown to make a one-off choice. I guess we'll all learn how to dig out the stuff we need. |
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