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Part III<br />

Creating Charts and Graphics<br />

FIGURE 19.17<br />

If you have lengthy category labels, a bar chart may be a good choice.<br />

NOTE<br />

Unlike a column chart, no subtype displays multiple series along a third axis. (That is, Excel<br />

does not provide a 3-D Bar Chart subtype.)<br />

As with a column chart, you can include any number of data series in a bar chart. In addition, the bars can<br />

be “stacked” from left to right.<br />

Line charts<br />

Line charts are often used to plot continuous data and are useful for identifying trends. For example, plotting<br />

daily sales as a line chart may enable you to identify sales fluctuations over time. Normally, the category<br />

axis for a line chart displays equal intervals. Excel supports seven line chart subtypes.<br />

See Figure 19.18 for an example of a line chart that depicts daily sales (200 data points). Although the data<br />

varies quite a bit on a daily basis, the chart clearly depicts an upward trend.<br />

ON the CD-ROM<br />

A workbook that contains the charts in this section is available on the companion CD-ROM.<br />

The file is named line charts.xlsx.<br />

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