shortcuts. The Paintbrush button presents a variety of color schemes and styles for your chart. The filter button allows you to delete selected elements from the chart and gives a shortcut for opening the Select Data Source dialog box (which I use in the later section “Drawing the Line.”)
Stacking the Columns
If I had selected Excel’s seventh recommended chart, I would have created a set of columns that presents the same information in a slightly different way. This type of chart is called Stacked Columns. Each column represents the total of all the data series at a point on the x-axis. Each column is divided into segments and each segment’s size is proportional to how much it contributes to the total. Figure 3-8 shows this.
FIGURE 3-8: A stacked column chart of the data in Table 3-1.
I inserted each graph into the worksheet. Excel also allows you to move a graph to a separate sheet in the workbook. Click on the chart to make the Chart Design tab visible. Then choose Chart Design | Move Chart (it’s on the extreme right side of the Chart Design tab) to open the Move Chart dialog box. Click the New Sheet radio button to add a sheet and move the chart there. Figure 3-9 shows how the chart looks in its own chart sheet. As you can see in Figure 3-9, I relocated the legend from Figure 3-8.
FIGURE 3-9: The Stacked Column chart, in its own chart sheet.
This is a nice way of showing percentage changes over the course of time. If you just want to focus on percentages in one year, the next type of graph is more effective.
Slicing the Pie
On to the next chart type. To show the percentages that make up one total, a pie chart gets the job done effectively.
Suppose you want to focus on US commercial space revenues for 1994 — the last column of data in Table 3-1. You catch people’s attention when you present the data in the form of a pie chart, like the one in Figure 3-10.
FIGURE 3-10: A pie chart of the last column of data in Table 3-1.
Here’s how to create this chart:
1 Enter your data into a worksheet.It’s pretty easy. I’ve already done this.
2 Select the data that go into the chart.I want the names in column A and the data in column F. The trick is to select column A (cells A2 through A7) in the usual way and then press and hold the Ctrl key. While holding this key, drag the cursor from F2 through F7. Voilà — two non-adjoining columns are selected.
3 Choose Insert | Recommended Charts from the main menu and pick Pie Chart from the list on the left side of the screen.
4 Modify the chart.Figure 3-11 shows the initial pie chart (after I added the title) on its own sheet. To get it to look like Figure 3-10, I had to do a lot of modifying. First, I formatted the legend as in the preceding example.The numbers inside the slices are called data labels. To add them, I select the chart (not just one slice) and then click the Chart Elements button. I then check the box next to Data Labels.To change the font color of the labels, click one of the data labels and select Text Options in the Format Data Labels pane that appears. Click the Solid Fill radio button and change the color from black to white. Press Ctrl+B to make the font bold.
FIGURE 3-11: The initial pie chart, on its own sheet.
Whenever you set up a pie chart, always keep the following in mind… .
A word from the wise
The late, great social commentator, raconteur, and former baseball player Yogi Berra once went to a restaurant and ordered a whole pizza.
“How many slices should I cut,” asked the waitress, “four or eight?”
“Better make it four,” said Yogi. “I'm not hungry enough to eat eight.”
Yogi’s insightful analysis leads to a useful guideline about pie charts: They’re more digestible if they have fewer slices. If you cut a pie chart too fine, you’re likely to leave your audience with information overload.
When you create a chart for a presentation (as in PowerPoint), include the data labels. They often clarify important points and trends for your audience.
(That Yogi anecdote appears in the previous four editions of this book. Did it really happen? We can’t be sure. As Mr. Berra once famously said: “Half the lies they tell about me aren’t true.”)
Drawing the Line
In the preceding example, I focus on one column of data from Table 3-1. In this example, I focus on one row. The idea is to trace the progress of one space related industry across the years 1990–94. In this example, I graph the revenues from Satellite Services. The final product, shown on its own sheet, is shown in Figure 3-12.
FIGURE 3-12: A line chart of the second row of data in Table 3-1.
A line chart is a good way to show change over time, when you aren't dealing with many data series. If you try to graph all six industries on one line chart, it begins to look like spaghetti.
How do you create a chart like Figure 3-12? Follow along:
1 Enter your data into a worksheet.Once again, it’s already done.
2 Select the data that go into the chart.For this example, that’s cells A3 through F3. Yes, I include the label.Whoa! Did I forget something? What about that little trick I showed you earlier, where you hold down the Ctrl key and select additional cells? Couldn’t I do that and select the top row of years for the x-axis?Nope. Not this time. If I do that, Excel thinks 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, and 1994 are just another series of data points to plot on the graph. I show you another way to put those years on the x-axis.
3 Choose Insert | Recommended Charts from the main menu and select a chart type.This time, I select the All Charts tab, pick Line in the left column, and choose Line with Markers from the options. Figure 3-13 shows the result.
4 Modify the chart.The line on the chart might be a little hard to see. Clicking the line and then