Andy,
Thanks for the reply. I had thought of that, but its a bit beyond my
understanding of Excel and chartsd to achieve it. I have seen in a number of
posts reference to the LINEST() function, however having played with it for a
little while I have to say I am none the wiser as how to use the result from
this function to plot a line, let alone one that matches the automatic trend
line.
Any help would be greatly appreciated
"Andy Pope" wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Looks like the trend line is drawn on the top layer of charting elements.
>
> You could calculate the trend line using formula and plot it as a normal
> series. Then you can change the plot order.
>
> Cheers
> Andy
>
> --
>
> Andy Pope, Microsoft MVP - Excel
> http://www.andypope.info
> "Richard Wood" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:97B9F4A4-0C98-4CA0-A9C1-(E-Mail Removed)...
> > Is there any way I can get the trend line to appear BEHIND the data line
> > it
> > is trending? I have a chart which is very clear to see when there is a
> > great
> > deal of varience in the data line (which unfortunatly is a bad condition)
> > but
> > when the data is is a very stable state (good condition) the data line
> > tends
> > to get lost behind the trend line and is not very visible.
> >
> > I am using Excel 2002, just in case it is relevant
> >
>