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Chart with three variables

 
 
glasbergenm
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      31st Jan 2006

I've made hundreds of runs with a computer model. With every run, two o
the variables are changed, resulting in a new number (third variable).
want to make a chart, with the first variable on the x-axis and th
second variable on the y-axis. The point in the chart needs to have
besides the x and y-value, the value of the third variable. Through th
points with the same third variable, a trendline has to be drawn
Because there are several hundreds of model runs, I don't want to sor
the data manually on the third variable and make a seperate serie o
all data with the same third variable. Is there an easier way to creat
such a chart

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Jon Peltier
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      31st Jan 2006
Depending on the data, you might be able to turn the data into a pivot
table, with your X values in the row area, the third variable in the column
area, and the Y values in your data area. If the third variable is a
continuous variable, you may get reasonable results if you group the values
in this field.

- Jon
-------
Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP
Peltier Technical Services
Tutorials and Custom Solutions
http://PeltierTech.com/
_______


"glasbergenm" <(E-Mail Removed)>
wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>
> I've made hundreds of runs with a computer model. With every run, two of
> the variables are changed, resulting in a new number (third variable). I
> want to make a chart, with the first variable on the x-axis and the
> second variable on the y-axis. The point in the chart needs to have,
> besides the x and y-value, the value of the third variable. Through the
> points with the same third variable, a trendline has to be drawn.
> Because there are several hundreds of model runs, I don't want to sort
> the data manually on the third variable and make a seperate serie of
> all data with the same third variable. Is there an easier way to create
> such a chart?
>
>
> --
> glasbergenm



 
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glasbergenm
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      1st Feb 2006

Dear Jon,

I don't see how I can use the pivot table to create the graph. I've pu
the data and a hand-made example for a part of the file as an attachmen
to this message. I hope this gives a better understanding of what
need

+-------------------------------------------------------------------
|Filename: Clipboard.jpg
|Download: http://www.excelforum.com/attachment.php?postid=4288
+-------------------------------------------------------------------

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Jon Peltier
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      1st Feb 2006
The download link didn't work. ("Invalid Attachment specified", whatever
that means.)

You have three columns, X, Y, and Z. I described the arrangement of the
pivot table in my previous post in this thread.

To create a regular chart from a pivot table, select a blank cell outside
the pivot table, and start the chart wizard. In step 1, select the chart
type. In step 2, click on the Series tab, then add each series individually,
defining the Name (column header in the PT), X Values (left column in the
PT), and Y Values (data column in the PT).

- Jon
-------
Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP
Peltier Technical Services
Tutorials and Custom Solutions
http://PeltierTech.com/
_______


"glasbergenm" <(E-Mail Removed)>
wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>
> Dear Jon,
>
> I don't see how I can use the pivot table to create the graph. I've put
> the data and a hand-made example for a part of the file as an attachment
> to this message. I hope this gives a better understanding of what I
> need.
>
>
> +-------------------------------------------------------------------+
> |Filename: Clipboard.jpg |
> |Download: http://www.excelforum.com/attachment.php?postid=4288 |
> +-------------------------------------------------------------------+
>
> --
> glasbergenm



 
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=?Utf-8?B?Qi4gUi5SYW1hY2hhbmRyYW4=?=
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      1st Feb 2006
Hi,

I posted a response to your post about 6 hours ago, but it hasn't gone
through yet; so I am posting it again.

For convenience, place your X-values in Column B (e.g., B2:B101), Y-values
in Column C (i.e., C2:C101), and Z-values in Column A (i.e., A2:A101).
Select the entire range (A2:C101) and sort by Column A. Make an XY-Scatter
Plot of Y-values vs X-values (Don't join the data points on the plot!).

Place one of the possible Z-values in D2.
Select E2:E101, and in the Formula Bar below the Tool Bar enter the
following array-formula and confirm with CTRL-SHIFT-ENTER.

=INDIRECT("B"&LARGE(ROW($A$2:$A$101)*($A$2:$A$101=$D$2),COUNTIF($A$2:$A$101,$D$2))&":B"&MAX(ROW($A$2:$A$101)*($A$2:$A$101=$D$2)))

Similarly, select F2:F101, and enter the following array-formula.

=INDIRECT("C"&LARGE(ROW($A$2:$A$101)*($A$2:$A$101=$D$2),COUNTIF($A$2:$A$101,$D$2))&":C"&MAX(ROW($A$2:$A$101)*($A$2:$A$101=$D$2)))

Add a series (Series 2) to the graph you have already created, using E2:E101
as the X-range and F2:F101 as the Y-range. This plot would correspond to the
subset of your X,Y-data that is relevant to the Z-value you have entered in
D2, and hence will overlap a part of the first plot. Add a trendline to
Series 2 (and set it up for the equation to show).

Now you can manually change the Z-value, and the Series 2 plot (and the
trendline and the trendline equation) will update accordingly.

Regards,
B. R. Ramachandran

"glasbergenm" wrote:

>
> I've made hundreds of runs with a computer model. With every run, two of
> the variables are changed, resulting in a new number (third variable). I
> want to make a chart, with the first variable on the x-axis and the
> second variable on the y-axis. The point in the chart needs to have,
> besides the x and y-value, the value of the third variable. Through the
> points with the same third variable, a trendline has to be drawn.
> Because there are several hundreds of model runs, I don't want to sort
> the data manually on the third variable and make a seperate serie of
> all data with the same third variable. Is there an easier way to create
> such a chart?
>
>
> --
> glasbergenm
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> glasbergenm's Profile: http://www.excelforum.com/member.php...o&userid=31001
> View this thread: http://www.excelforum.com/showthread...hreadid=506690
>
>

 
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glasbergenm
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      2nd Feb 2006

The Array-formulas work perfectly, but are not the (complete) solution
to my problem: it still means a lot of manual labour to create the
trendlines for all of the data (the Z-value can have about 135
different values). I've tried to make a row with all possible Z-values
and copy the array formula below that row. Instead of cell D2, I've
made the formula depend on the Z-values in the above row. Copying of
the array formula, however, doesn't seem as easy as copying an
ordinairy formula. When I've found a solution for this, I could use the
TREND function (asuming a linear dependency), but this formula has
difficulties with blank cells, error values and zero's (every z-value
has a different amount of x and y-values).

What was I thinking when I said "of course I can do this..."


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=?Utf-8?B?Qi4gUi5SYW1hY2hhbmRyYW4=?=
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      2nd Feb 2006
Hi,

How about the following approach?

In D2136, enter all possible Z-values.
In E2 and F2, enter the following array-formulas respectively
(CTRL-SHIFT-ENT), autofill the formulas down to E136 and F136 (Note that
these formulas are somewhat analogous to the ones I had posted in my previous
response, except that I have removed the "INDIRECT" parts and have modified
the "$D$2"s as "$D2"s).

=
"B"&LARGE(ROW($A$2:$A$101)*($A$2:$A$101=$D2),COUNTIF($A$2:$A$101,$D2))&":B"&MAX(ROW($A$2:$A$101)*($A$2:$A$101=$D2))

="C"&LARGE(ROW($A$2:$A$101)*($A$2:$A$101=$D2),COUNTIF($A$2:$A$101,$D2))&":C"&MAX(ROW($A$2:$A$101)*($A$2:$A$101=$D2))

The above formulas will return the X- and Y- ranges (as strings) for each
Z-value inColumn D.

You can use the strings in Columns E and F as arguments for functions such
as SLOPE, INTERCEPT, TREND, and LINEST.

For example, enter the following formulas in G2 and H2 respectively, and
autofill them down to G136 and H136.

=SLOPE(INDIRECT(F2),INDIRECT(E2))
=INTERCEPT(INDIRECT(F2),INDIRECT(E2))

Regards,
B. R. Ramachandran



"glasbergenm" wrote:

>
> The Array-formulas work perfectly, but are not the (complete) solution
> to my problem: it still means a lot of manual labour to create the
> trendlines for all of the data (the Z-value can have about 135
> different values). I've tried to make a row with all possible Z-values
> and copy the array formula below that row. Instead of cell D2, I've
> made the formula depend on the Z-values in the above row. Copying of
> the array formula, however, doesn't seem as easy as copying an
> ordinairy formula. When I've found a solution for this, I could use the
> TREND function (asuming a linear dependency), but this formula has
> difficulties with blank cells, error values and zero's (every z-value
> has a different amount of x and y-values).
>
> What was I thinking when I said "of course I can do this..."
>
>
> --
> glasbergenm
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> glasbergenm's Profile: http://www.excelforum.com/member.php...o&userid=31001
> View this thread: http://www.excelforum.com/showthread...hreadid=506690
>
>

 
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Del Cotter
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      3rd Feb 2006
On Wed, 1 Feb 2006, in microsoft.public.excel.charting,
Jon Peltier <(E-Mail Removed)> said:

>The download link didn't work. ("Invalid Attachment specified", whatever
>that means.)


Jon, click on the "view this thread" link instead, and then click on
"Clipboard.jpg" from the page that comes up, or "example.zip" to
download the sample dataset.

>> I don't see how I can use the pivot table to create the graph. I've put
>> the data and a hand-made example for a part of the file as an attachment
>> to this message. I hope this gives a better understanding of what I
>> need.


It looks to me like what you're describing is a contour, or surface,
chart. Excel does those. You may then have to manually trace the
contours onto separate graphs if you wanted, but I can't see why you'd
want to: the contour chart shows them all elegantly in one.

However, I failed to get the chart wizard to build a surface chart
straight from a pivot chart, because the grey buttons confused the
wizard, so I had to create a whole extra table that just duplicated the
pivot chart without the "B" and "POC" etc. That let me produce
something showing the X and Y axes with realistic scales.

See if this helps:

http://www.branta.demon.co.uk/science/example2.xls

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Jon Peltier
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      5th Feb 2006

>>The download link didn't work. ("Invalid Attachment specified", whatever
>>that means.)

>
> Jon, click on the "view this thread" link instead, and then click on
> "Clipboard.jpg" from the page that comes up, or "example.zip" to download
> the sample dataset.


I'm not going to open the data file, but I did look at the chart image.

>>> I don't see how I can use the pivot table to create the graph. I've put
>>> the data and a hand-made example for a part of the file as an attachment
>>> to this message. I hope this gives a better understanding of what I
>>> need.

>
> It looks to me like what you're describing is a contour, or surface,
> chart. Excel does those. You may then have to manually trace the contours
> onto separate graphs if you wanted, but I can't see why you'd want to: the
> contour chart shows them all elegantly in one.


I don't think it's a contour chart that the OP wants, I think it's a chart
with a whole set of trendlines. I can't see any way to do this without
making separate trendlines for each subset of the data. This means doing
what the OP didn't want to do: "sort the data manually on the third variable
and make a seperate serie of all data with the same third variable." I would
take this opportunity to learn how VBA might make one's life easier by
automatic the constructions of so many data series and trendlines.

- Jon
-------
Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP
Peltier Technical Services
Tutorials and Custom Solutions
http://PeltierTech.com/
_______



 
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