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I have an Excel chart where one of the sets of data (vertical bars) would be
better displayed on the underside of the x axis (i.e. negative instead of positive). Is there any way I can make this happen using the chart formatting features? If not presumably I shall create another column to calculate the negative data, and then plot that. TIA V |
#2
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Victor Delta wrote:
I have an Excel chart where one of the sets of data (vertical bars) would be better displayed on the underside of the x axis (i.e. negative instead of positive). Is there any way I can make this happen using the chart formatting features? If not presumably I shall create another column to calculate the negative data, and then plot that. That is indeed your best bet. Additionally, a stacked column chart will avoid staggering the positive and negative values along the x-axis. |
#3
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![]() "smartin" wrote in message ... Victor Delta wrote: I have an Excel chart where one of the sets of data (vertical bars) would be better displayed on the underside of the x axis (i.e. negative instead of positive). Is there any way I can make this happen using the chart formatting features? If not presumably I shall create another column to calculate the negative data, and then plot that. That is indeed your best bet. Additionally, a stacked column chart will avoid staggering the positive and negative values along the x-axis. You can avoid this offset by changing the overlap to 100%. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Peltier Technical Services, Inc. http://PeltierTech.com/WordPress/ _______ |
#4
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"Jon Peltier" wrote in message
... "smartin" wrote in message ... Victor Delta wrote: I have an Excel chart where one of the sets of data (vertical bars) would be better displayed on the underside of the x axis (i.e. negative instead of positive). Is there any way I can make this happen using the chart formatting features? If not presumably I shall create another column to calculate the negative data, and then plot that. That is indeed your best bet. Additionally, a stacked column chart will avoid staggering the positive and negative values along the x-axis. You can avoid this offset by changing the overlap to 100%. Many thanks to both of you for your suggestions. V |
#5
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"Jon Peltier" wrote in message
... "smartin" wrote in message ... Victor Delta wrote: I have an Excel chart where one of the sets of data (vertical bars) would be better displayed on the underside of the x axis (i.e. negative instead of positive). Is there any way I can make this happen using the chart formatting features? If not presumably I shall create another column to calculate the negative data, and then plot that. That is indeed your best bet. Additionally, a stacked column chart will avoid staggering the positive and negative values along the x-axis. You can avoid this offset by changing the overlap to 100%. I created the new column today with a formula that generates the negative value, and plotted that instead of the original positive vale. That was fine. However, then an Excel 'gotcha' got me. When I hid the column, the corresponding bars disappeared off the graph! Surely there is a way of plotting hidden date in a spreadsheet? I can't believe it's impossible. V |
#6
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That's a default setting that suppresses plotting of hidden data. You can
change this on a chart by chart basis. In Excel 2003 and earlier: Tools menu Options Chart tab, uncheck Plot Visible Cells Only. In Excel 2007: Chart Tools - Design tab Select Data Hidden and Empty Cells button Check Show data in hidden rows and columns. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Peltier Technical Services, Inc. http://PeltierTech.com/WordPress/ _______ "Victor Delta" wrote in message ... "Jon Peltier" wrote in message ... "smartin" wrote in message ... Victor Delta wrote: I have an Excel chart where one of the sets of data (vertical bars) would be better displayed on the underside of the x axis (i.e. negative instead of positive). Is there any way I can make this happen using the chart formatting features? If not presumably I shall create another column to calculate the negative data, and then plot that. That is indeed your best bet. Additionally, a stacked column chart will avoid staggering the positive and negative values along the x-axis. You can avoid this offset by changing the overlap to 100%. I created the new column today with a formula that generates the negative value, and plotted that instead of the original positive vale. That was fine. However, then an Excel 'gotcha' got me. When I hid the column, the corresponding bars disappeared off the graph! Surely there is a way of plotting hidden date in a spreadsheet? I can't believe it's impossible. V |
#7
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"Jon Peltier" wrote in message
... That's a default setting that suppresses plotting of hidden data. You can change this on a chart by chart basis. In Excel 2003 and earlier: Tools menu Options Chart tab, uncheck Plot Visible Cells Only. In Excel 2007: Chart Tools - Design tab Select Data Hidden and Empty Cells button Check Show data in hidden rows and columns. Jon You are a star - many thanks. V |
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