On Fri, 11 Jul 2008, in microsoft.public.excel.charting,
Katherine <(E-Mail Removed)> said:
>I'm trying to create a Bubble chart (in Excel 2007) that has:
>1. Interest as the X-axis
>2. Influence/Authority as the Y-axis
>3. Role as the bubble size
>4. Business Unit as the Series name
>
>If there is only once instance of a particular business unit, then
>this doesn't appear to be a problem. It's a bit manual, but generally
>works. But when I need to create another row for an existing Business
>Unit, then I have to manually open that Series, and add in the cell
>reference to the new X, Y, and Bubble size.
I recommend laying out your data like this:
Influence/Authority
-------------------
Interest Cards & Payments Role
7 9 5
10 5 2
Interest Internet Role
10 8 2
(You may prefer to put "Internet" off to the right to give "Cards &
Payments" room to grow)
Then create your Bubble chart using "Cards & Payments" only. Make sure
your created bubble chart is embedded on the data sheet, and not a Chart
Sheet of its own. This makes life a lot easier.
Now, add the "Internet" block to the chart by selecting the block using
the mouse, and dragging the block by one of its black edges on to the
nearby chart. A Paste Special dialogue box should appear. Make sure that
"New series" is selected, not "New points(s)". Make sure that "Series
names in First Row" is checked. Do this for each type of business unit
(you don't have to do it for each line).
This is all for Excel 97-2003; I have no idea if 2007 looks like this.
In future, all you have to do is select the series to which a new line
has been added, and a set of coloured handles will appear on the data
sheet. Unfortunately you have to drag all three boxes, they don't lock
to each other for some reason, but this is probably still quicker than
what you were doing before.
And now you probably will be able to design a dynamic range that
automatically detects new lines. You will have to add a new block for
each new type of business unit as it appears for the first time, and you
will also have to store the lines in different blocks instead of one big
data block, unless you use a pivot table to make the blocks from a data
series.
--
Del Cotter
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