P
Pirjo
H
My customer has an Excel workbook with several hundreds of lines. Every line represents a timescale. He also has a Floating Chart visualizing the timescale. Printing is on continuous form.
When the table is about 200 lines the chart is no more printed. And when he adds more lines (and thus more columns to the chart) he also fails to add more lines (columns) to the chart.
Note that the bars are shown and printed vertically (as rows) on continuous form and in principle not limited to paper size.
I found an article explaining that if the chart is printed full page, it has a limit of 200 columns.
Is there also a limit to adding columns to a chart ?
And are these limits regardless to the actual printing (I mean an A4 sheet can distinguish far less columns than a continuous form) ?
My customer has an Excel workbook with several hundreds of lines. Every line represents a timescale. He also has a Floating Chart visualizing the timescale. Printing is on continuous form.
When the table is about 200 lines the chart is no more printed. And when he adds more lines (and thus more columns to the chart) he also fails to add more lines (columns) to the chart.
Note that the bars are shown and printed vertically (as rows) on continuous form and in principle not limited to paper size.
I found an article explaining that if the chart is printed full page, it has a limit of 200 columns.
Is there also a limit to adding columns to a chart ?
And are these limits regardless to the actual printing (I mean an A4 sheet can distinguish far less columns than a continuous form) ?