Excel- Chapter 12: Creating Charts
Purpose of PivotTable reports and PivotCharts
-Analyze large amounts of data -subtotal and gather numeric data, summarize data by categories and subcategories, and create custom calculations and formulas -expand and collapse levels of data to filter results, and drilling down finer points from the summary data for areas of importance -moving rows to columns or columns to rows to examine different summaries of the data
Modifying a Chart's legends
-Modify the content of the legend -change the position of the legend relative to the chart -expand or collapse the legend box -Edit the text that is displayed -change character attributes
To create a basic chart
-enter the data for the chart on a worksheet -select that data and choose a chart type to graphically display the data
to identify data for your chart
1. select multiple ranges at one time that will become different chart elements 2. identify the chart type and then select the data for each chart element
amount of chart types
16 with numerous subtypes and combocharts
legend
A box that identifies the patterns or colors that are assigned to the data series or categories in a chart
Combined chart
A chart with multiple data series can have a different chart type for any single data series
Axis
A line bordering the chart plot area used as a frame of reference for measurement
If the element isn't visible
Add it by checking the chart elements option or inserting a text box
Modifying a Chart
Add or delete individual elements or by moving or resizing the chart Change the chart type without deleting existing chart or change how Excel selects data as its data elements by changing rows to columns
Formatting tab of QuickAnalysis Gallery
Allows you to format the cell data in different ways such as by color or etc.
PivotChart
An essential tool to help organize and arrange large amounts of data from worksheets. Can also visualize information in a simple chart
Quick Analysis tool
Appears when a data range is selected Allows you to quickly create charts, add spark lines, work with totals, format data with conditional formatting, create PivotTables
2-D and 3-D charts
Can't be combined.
To select elements you want to format
Click the arrow next to the Chart Elements box in the Current Selection group on the Format tab
To format a chart element
Click the chart element you want to change and then use the appropriate commands from the format tab
To edit existing titles or labels
Click the label, select the text, type the new text
title
Descriptive text that is aligned to an axis or at the top of a chart
PivotTable Fields pane of PivotTable Tools Tab
Display when you select any cell in the PivotTable and include options to perform additional tasks as you work with and improve a PivotTable report
Adding Data Labels
Helps make a chart more understandable
Chart elements that can be manually formatted
Legend, data labels, chart title, chart area, vertical/horizontal axis, plot area, data series
Chart's border line
Outline around a chart element
To resize a chart
Point to a corner of a chart or the midpoint of any side to display sizing handles, which are two-sided arrows Use the size handles to change the chart height or width Use the corner sizing handles to change both height and width
format tab
Provides a variety of ways to format chart elements
Adding elements to a chart
Provides more information to a chart
Quick Analysis tool with Totals
Quickly adds SUM, AVERAGE, and COUNT functions and % of Totals and Running Totals to bottom row or to the right of the data
PivotTable
Report that analyzes and displays the numerical data in detail and to answer unforeseen questions about data
data series
Row or column of data represented by a line, set of columns, bars or other chart type
To delete elements from a chart
Select an element on the chart and press the delete key Or select an element in the Chart Elements drop-down in the Current Selection group and press Delete
To apply a border around the entire chart
Select an element or the chart and use the colored outlines in the Shape Styles group on the Format tab, or click Shape outline and choose a color
To create an outline around a chart element
Select the element and apply one of the predefined outlines or click Shape Outline to format the shape of a selected chart element
To format a data series
Select the element to format, click on one of the buttons on the ribbon or display the Format pane to add fill color or a pattern to the selected chart element
Data labels
Text that provides additional information about a data marker, which represents a single data point or value that originates from a worksheet cell.
plot area
The area bounded by the axes
When you use the mouse to point to an element in the chart
The element name appears in a ScreenTip
chart area
The entire chart and all its elements.
When you click the arrow
The list includes all elements that you have included in the displayed chart
Commands on the Format tab
To add or change fill colors or patterns applied to chart elements
PivotTable report and PivotCharts
Ways to quickly condense and rearrange large amounts of data
data marker
a bar, area, dot, slice, or other symbol in a chart that represents a single data point or value that originates from a worksheet cell
chart
a graphical representation of numeric data in a worksheet
chart sheet
a sheet that contains only a chart
design buttons on the right of a selected chart
allow you to change the style and color and select which elements appear on the chart
chart styles
allows you to choose which style and color you want for your chart
to quickly change a chart's appearance
apply a predefined style or layout
surface chart usual data arrangement
both categories and values are numeric values
create Excel's common chart types
by clicking its image on the Insert tab of the ribbon
when you insert a chart
by default it is embedded in the worksheet
data arranged in columns or rows on a worksheet
can by plotted in a bar chart
doughnut chart usual data arrangement
categories are colors of circular bands and the size of the bands are the values of each band
bar chart usual data arrangement
categories or time are along the vertical axis and values are along the horizontal axis
area chart usual data arrangement
categories or time are on the horizontal axis and values are on the vertical axis
Column chart usual data arrangement
categories or time are usually on the horizontal axis and values are on the vertical axis
sizing handles
change size of a chart
embedded chart
charts placed on the worksheet rather than on a separate chart sheet
to move the chart
click in the white space and drag, using the four-headed black mouse pointer
clustered bar charts
compare values across categories
charts group on the insert tab
contains nine buttons leading to multiple chart types
insert tab
contains the command groups needed to create charts in Excel
stacked column
data markers are stacked so that the top of the column is the total of the same category from each data series
chart elements button
displays which items appear on the chart
2-D or 3-D column charts
each data marker is represented by a column
chart filters
enables you to filter your chart data to see only a portion of the source data charted
when you create a chart, the chart tools tab becomes available and the Design and Format tabs and Quick Layout button appear on the ribbon
enabling you to format a chart with a quick style or layout
column charts
facilitate comparisons among items and over time periods
radar chart usual data arrangement
first column is label of spike. First row is label of units. Values for each unit go down each column starting in the second column after the row labels.
bubble chart usual data arrangement
first value is horizontal distance, second value is vertical distance, and third value is the size of bubble
stock chart usual data arrangement
for each time period, there are three to five numbers
recommended charts button
helps narrow the choices of picking a chart depending on the data that you select
side-by-side bar charts
illustrate two views of the same data
data series
made up of related data markers
chart's data selection
must contain sufficient information to interpret the data at a glance
pie chart usual data arrangement
only one data series and none of the values are negative or are zero
data values
represented by graphs with combinations of lines, vertical or horizontal rectangles (columns and bars), points, and other shapes
click the charts dialog box launcher to open the Insert Chart dialog box
select from any chart type
stacked bar charts
show the relationship of individual items to the whole of that item
line charts
show trends over time
line chart
shows points connected by a line for each value
pie chart
shows values as part of the whole
bar charts
similar to column charts and can be used to illustrate comparisons among individual items
data in charts
some charts require a specific data arrangement
when you select data and create a pie chart
the chart is placed on the worksheet
when you click a chart type in the left pane
the first of that type is selected in the right pane
XY (Scatter chart) usual data arrangement
the independent variable is usually on the horizontal axis and the dependent variable is on the vertical axis
when you expand the selection to include row labels
then numeric data will be displayed as a label in a chart, not data
line chart usual data arrangement
time in equal units on horizontal axis and values on vertical axis
Sparklines
tiny miniature graphs
click a corner of a chart or the midpoint of any side
to display sizing handles, which are two-sided vertical, horizontal, or diagonal white arrows
all charts tab in Insert Chart dialog box
to see sample of all charts and subtypes
combo chart
two or more chart types, such as line and column, depicted in a single graphic
pie chart
useful for comparing the size of items in one data series and how each slice compares with the whole. Data points are displayed as a percentage of a circular pie.
bubble chart
useful for comparing three sets of values
column chart
useful for comparing values across categories or a time period. Data points are vertical rectangles
doughnut chart
useful for displaying the relationship of parts to a whole. Can contain more than one data series. Values are represented as sections of a circular band.
area chart
useful for emphasizing magnitude of change over time. Shows relationships of parts to the whole. Values represented as shaded areas.
surface chart
useful for finding optimum combinations between two sets of data. The resulting plot looks similar to a topographic map or piece of cloth draped over points
bar chart
useful for illustrating comparisons among individual items when axis labels are long. Values are represented as horizontal rectangles
stock chart
useful for illustrating the fluctuation of stock prices or scientific data when there is a start, end, high, and low value during each period
radar chart
useful for showing multiple variables for each subject, standardized to the same scale. Represents values as points that radiate on spikes from the center
XY (Scatter) Chart
useful for showing relationships of one numeric set of data against another numeric set of data to see whether there is a correlation between two variables
line chart
useful for showing trends in data at equal intervals. displays continuous data over time set against a common scale. Values are represented as points along a line.