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Hello, all,
I have created a spreadsheet in Excel 2000 that tracks the amount of time it has taken me on various dates to finish the New York Time crossword puzzle, and now I'm being asked to analyze that information for trends. The XLS file can be found at http://barelybad.com/xwd_times_may04_2005_138.xls. Only rows 10:426 matter. Is it possible to chart all seven days' worth of data (dates on the x-axis and times on the y-axis) on one chart? I would have thought so, but I can't figure it out. Also, you'll see from where I tried to chart the Monday times that the result is ugly and unhelpful; is there some way to smooth out the X-axis data so they show a general trend rather that every single point? The chart is also misleading in that dates for which I did not record a time at all show up as time 00:00:00. Nothing I've tried fixes this crucial problem. Also, is there a numerical way to express the rate of change of times from the beginning date to the ending date for, say, just the Friday puzzles? I can't seem to get the SLOPE function to make sense, and I'm not sure that's what I want anyway. What function (or functions) would you use, and exactly how would you use it (making sure the blank cells don't count as zero!), to express whether I've gotten stupider since April 28, 1997? Thanks for any help you can offer. --Johnny barelybad.com johnnyg aatssiign B_A_R_E_L_Y_B_A_D d.o.t c-o-m |
#2
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===============
[A few minutes later] Re-hello, all, Using Outlook Express I just read my own original post below, and when I click on the URL for the spreadsheet it opens Internet Explorer just fine, but then it never opens the Excel file. When I copy and paste the address into IE it opens Excel as I would expect. Any ideas why clicking fails? Sorry if I'm being ignorant here. --Johnny =============== "Johnny" wrote in message ... Hello, all, I have created a spreadsheet in Excel 2000 that tracks the amount of time it has taken me on various dates to finish the New York Time crossword puzzle, and now I'm being asked to analyze that information for trends. The XLS file can be found at http://barelybad.com/xwd_times_may04_2005_138.xls. Only rows 10:426 matter. Is it possible to chart all seven days' worth of data (dates on the x-axis and times on the y-axis) on one chart? I would have thought so, but I can't figure it out. Also, you'll see from where I tried to chart the Monday times that the result is ugly and unhelpful; is there some way to smooth out the X-axis data so they show a general trend rather that every single point? The chart is also misleading in that dates for which I did not record a time at all show up as time 00:00:00. Nothing I've tried fixes this crucial problem. Also, is there a numerical way to express the rate of change of times from the beginning date to the ending date for, say, just the Friday puzzles? I can't seem to get the SLOPE function to make sense, and I'm not sure that's what I want anyway. What function (or functions) would you use, and exactly how would you use it (making sure the blank cells don't count as zero!), to express whether I've gotten stupider since April 28, 1997? Thanks for any help you can offer. --Johnny barelybad.com johnnyg aatssiign B_A_R_E_L_Y_B_A_D d.o.t c-o-m |
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