Excel 6
Excel 6
Excel 6
Lesson15-Charts
Introduction
A chart is a tool you can use in Excel to communicate your data graphically.
Charts allow your audience to see the meaning behind the numbers, and they
make showing comparisons and trends a lot easier. In this lesson, you will learn
how to insert charts and modify them so that they communicate information
effectively.
Excel workbooks can contain a lot of data, and that data can often be difficult to
interpret. For example, where are the highest and lowest values? Are the
numbers increasing or decreasing?
The answers to questions like these can become much clearer when the data is
represented as a chart. Excel has many different types of charts, so you can
choose one that most effectively represents the data.
Types of Charts
The chart or graph type will depend on the data for which you are going to plot
the chart. The most commonly used types include Column Chart, Line Graphs, Pie
Chart, Bar Graph, Area Chart, Scatter Graphs, Stock Chart, and Surface Chart,
among many others. Lets discuss these chart types, and the situations in which a
specific chart type is used.
ITEC106-Excel 2010 Lecture Notes
Column Chart
The Column chart is one of the most commonly used chart type and is used to
show the changes in data over a period of time or illustrate comparisons among
items.
Line Graphs
Line Graphs are mainly used to plot changes in data over time. The best example
of this chart type can be the weekly change in temperature.
ITEC106-Excel 2010 Lecture Notes
Pie Chart
The Pie Chart is very useful when you wish to emphasize on a significant element
in the data. It represents data in the form of a pie.
Bar Graph
A bar graph illustrates comparisons among individual items.
ITEC106-Excel 2010 Lecture Notes
Area Chart
Scatter Graphs
The Scatter Graph and Line chart are almost similar, but the scatter graph is
displayed with a scribble line whereas the line graph uses connected lines to
display data.
ITEC106-Excel 2010 Lecture Notes
Surface Charts
A surface chart comes in handy if you are to determine the optimum combination
between two sets of data.
Parts of Charts
The typical chart (or graph) in Excel 2010 comprises several distinct parts,
including the chart area, data series, axes, legend, plot area, gridlines, data
markers, and more. The following list summarizes the parts of a typical Excel
chart, some of which appear in the illustration.
ITEC106-Excel 2010 Lecture Notes
Chart area: Everything inside the chart window, including all parts of the chart
(labels, axes, data markers, tick marks, and other elements listed here).
Data series: A group of related values, such as all the values in a single row in the
chart. A chart can have just one data series (shown in a single bar or line), but it
usually has several.
Axis: A line that serves as a major reference for plotting data in a chart. In two-
dimensional charts there are two axes — the x-axis (horizontal/category) and the
y-axis (vertical/value). In most two-dimensional charts (except bar charts), Excel
plots categories (labels) along the x-axis and values (numbers) along the y-axis.
Bar charts reverse the scheme, plotting values along the x-axis. Pie charts have no
axes. Three-dimensional charts have an x-axis, a y-axis, and a z-axis. The x- and y-
axes delineate the horizontal surface of the chart. The z-axis is the vertical axis,
showing the depth of the third dimension in the chart.
Tick mark: A small line intersecting an axis. A tick mark indicates a category, scale,
or chart data series. A tick mark can have a label attached.
Plot area: The area where Excel plots your data, including the axes and all
markers that represent data points.
Gridlines: Optional lines extending from the tick marks across the plot area, thus
making it easier to view the data values represented by the tick marks.
Chart text: A label or title that you add to the chart. Attached text is a title or
label linked to an axis such as the Chart Title, Vertical Axis Title, and Horizontal
Axis Title that you can't move independently of the chart. Unattached text is text
that you add with the Text Box command button on the Insert tab of the Ribbon.
Legend: A key that identifies patterns, colors, or symbols associated with the
markers of a chart data series. The legend shows the data series name
corresponding to each data marker (such as the name of the blue columns in a
column chart).
ITEC106-Excel 2010 Lecture Notes
To Create a Chart:
1. Select the cells that you want to chart, including the column
titles and the row labels. These cells will be thesource
data for the chart.
Selecting cells
Selecting
the Column category
Selecting a
chart type
Chart Tools
Once you insert a chart, a set of Chart Tools, arranged into three tabs, will
appear on the Ribbon. These are only visible when the chart is selected. You can
use these three tabs to modify your chart.
Book Sales,
grouped by Fiction/Non-Fiction
Book sales,
grouped by year
ITEC106-Excel 2010 Lecture Notes
The updated
layout
ITEC106-Excel 2010 Lecture Notes
Some layouts include chart titles, axes, or legend labels. To change them,
just place the insertion point in the text and begin typing.
Selecting a chart
style
4. The chart will update to reflect the new style.
ITEC106-Excel 2010 Lecture Notes
The updated
chart
Selecting a
different worksheet for the chart
ITEC106-Excel 2010 Lecture Notes
Challenge!