Advice on simple graphs with Excel 2010

J

James Silverton

Can anyone point me to a good book on creating graphs with Excel?
Walkenbach's book that used be my bible is out of date. It was quite
easy with 2003; select the data and make a graph. The various choices
were obvious. Why did they have to change things with the damned ribbon?

I have several columns of data with labels and days as sequential
numbers going from 0 to current and I find difficulty in choosing axis
labels and markers. I want a conventional graph with its origin at lower
left and axes outside and a title for the chart. I have succeeded in
plotting the data and producing a legend for the graphs.

Thanks in advance.
 
G

GS

James Silverton wrote on 1/16/2012 :
Can anyone point me to a good book on creating graphs with Excel?
Walkenbach's book that used be my bible is out of date. It was quite easy
with 2003; select the data and make a graph. The various choices were
obvious. Why did they have to change things with the damned ribbon?

I have several columns of data with labels and days as sequential numbers
going from 0 to current and I find difficulty in choosing axis labels and
markers. I want a conventional graph with its origin at lower left and axes
outside and a title for the chart. I have succeeded in plotting the data and
producing a legend for the graphs.

Thanks in advance.

J-Walk has books for every version. Why not just upgrade your library?
 
J

James Silverton

James Silverton wrote on 1/16/2012 :

J-Walk has books for every version. Why not just upgrade your library?

I've had a look at several books including Walkenbach (in Barnes and
Noble's, I must admit) but I can't see any good way to produce a chart
with about 8 series and with the names of the series, which are the
column names, in the legend. I can get the series but not the legends. I
have to change the legends from Series1, Series2 etc. by hand. I don't
do this often enough to contemplate writing a macro but has anyone any
ideas? I won't argue with anyone who doesn't see why I should want to do
such a thing but I'll indicate that it involves stock prices in a portfolio.
 
G

GS

James Silverton brought next idea :
I've had a look at several books including Walkenbach (in Barnes and Noble's,
I must admit) but I can't see any good way to produce a chart with about 8
series and with the names of the series, which are the column names, in the
legend. I can get the series but not the legends. I have to change the
legends from Series1, Series2 etc. by hand. I don't do this often enough to
contemplate writing a macro but has anyone any ideas? I won't argue with
anyone who doesn't see why I should want to do such a thing but I'll indicate
that it involves stock prices in a portfolio.

Jim,
See if you can find anything here...

http://www.contextures.com/tiptech.html#C
 

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