Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In Excel2003 under WXPSP2, a sequence of procedures computes frequency
and cumulative distributions and relative frequency and relative cumulative distributions for each of two treatments for each of ten variables. Two previously created custom chart types (one line with markers and one 3D column, each displaying the two series for the two treatments for the given variable) are invoked in the chart generating procedure and various properties defined for charting the relative frequency and relative cumulative distributions. Two problems have arisen. (1) Either the last half or last 10% of the final letter of the xlValue axis title is missing. How can I force ExcelVBA to show the whole title without reducing the font size? There seems to be plenty of room on the chart to fill out that final letter. (2) The second series label is missing from all the 3D column charts for which there are "many" (e. g., 50 or more) categories; but when there are only a "few" categories (i. e., 11), the columns are big enough that the depth axis for the series names will show both series names on the chart. How can I force ExcelVBA to place the second series name (only 5 letters long) next to the first series name (also only 5 letters long) for all the other 3D column charts? Thank you for any help or suggestions. |
#2
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The Y axis issue is a well known problem and I've seen microsoft bulletins on
it, but can't find them now. One workaround is to add a couple of spaces to the end of the Y axis label and format those to the same color as the background of the chart. For the 3D column series issue, you can format the series for the 3d part and change the scale for # of series between tick marks from 2 to 1. I'm not sure how to do this in VBA, but I usually just record that as I do it and then clean up the code as necessary. HTH, Barb Reinhardt "chet" wrote: In Excel2003 under WXPSP2, a sequence of procedures computes frequency and cumulative distributions and relative frequency and relative cumulative distributions for each of two treatments for each of ten variables. Two previously created custom chart types (one line with markers and one 3D column, each displaying the two series for the two treatments for the given variable) are invoked in the chart generating procedure and various properties defined for charting the relative frequency and relative cumulative distributions. Two problems have arisen. (1) Either the last half or last 10% of the final letter of the xlValue axis title is missing. How can I force ExcelVBA to show the whole title without reducing the font size? There seems to be plenty of room on the chart to fill out that final letter. (2) The second series label is missing from all the 3D column charts for which there are "many" (e. g., 50 or more) categories; but when there are only a "few" categories (i. e., 11), the columns are big enough that the depth axis for the series names will show both series names on the chart. How can I force ExcelVBA to place the second series name (only 5 letters long) next to the first series name (also only 5 letters long) for all the other 3D column charts? Thank you for any help or suggestions. |
#3
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thank you, Barb, for your suggestions. They got me started on the
solution. This response is a little tardy because it took a while to follow all the procedures. In case anyone searches for discussion of these same problems, I'll report on my solutions. (1) For the truncated xlValue axis titles, padding the title with one or two trailing blank spaces did not work: Excel ignored the blanks and still cut off part of the final letter. Adding a period at the end of the title worked for about half the charts, but for the other half, the period was superimposed on the final letter. The solution was close to what you suggested: adding a trailing blank space and a period, then specifying in the VBA code .Characters(<titlelength-2, 2).Font.Color = vbWhite (where white is the chart background color) eliminated this problem. (2) For the formating of 3D column charts, several changes were necessary. The first step was, as you suggested, changing the number of series between tick marks to 1. This showed both series names but placed them too close to or overlapping each other. The spacing of the columns is controlled by the Format Data Series Options GapDepth, GapWidth, and ChartDepth options, with all three of which I had to experiment to find the values which worked best for the data in my case and which were different from the Excel default values. Finally, between the two data series, I also added a blank series by setting a column range of blank cells and specifying .DisplayBlanksAs = xlNotPlotted .Name = " " .Legend.LegendEntries(2).Delete This gave good spacing between the data series columns and the series axis labels (i. e., the series names) and removed any explicit indication in the chart, among the series axis labels, and in the legend of the blank series used for spacing. I also relearned the lesson of your last suggestion: I rebuilt the custom chart types while recording a macro, making sure to specify every feature and option. This gave me the necessary VBA code to create and manipulate charts in detail. Thank you for your response to my query. chet |
#4
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Oops. That first line of code for the first problem should read
.Characters(<titlelength-1, 2).Font.Color = vbWhite As erroneously specified, it would just recreate my original problem through a different mechanism. chet |
#5
![]()
Posted to microsoft.public.excel.programming
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
1. Instead of a period as the last character, use a non-breaking space
(ascii character 0160), which needs no font color adjustment. 2. You should try very hard to find a 2D chart that shows what you want. 3D charts are more complicated to build, and they present the data in a way which most readers find more difficult to understand. - Jon ------- Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP Tutorials and Custom Solutions Peltier Technical Services, Inc. - http://PeltierTech.com _______ "chet" wrote in message ups.com... Oops. That first line of code for the first problem should read .Characters(<titlelength-1, 2).Font.Color = vbWhite As erroneously specified, it would just recreate my original problem through a different mechanism. chet |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Y- AXIS LABEL IS TRUNCATED in EXCEL CHART ? | Charts and Charting in Excel | |||
Text Truncated on Vertical Chart Axis Label | Excel Discussion (Misc queries) | |||
Truncated "y" axis label in chart | Charts and Charting in Excel | |||
Pasting Objects into Chart title and Axis title | Charts and Charting in Excel | |||
The x-axis title is truncated in EXCEL charts 2003. | Charts and Charting in Excel |