I need to graph rainfall, per minute, on a column chart. All I can get excel to do is create one series with all of the data, when technically speaking, each time/rainfall depth should be its own series. Is there an easy way to get Excel to recognize this fact (other than going in and creating a series for each minute)?
8/31/2010 10:26:17 AM
wtf... can't put a column chart on the secondary axis?!?!!?excel 2010, btw.
8/31/2010 11:01:40 AM
Are you trying to make a line graph when what you really want is a scatter graph?
8/31/2010 4:40:12 PM
haha, no.I want a damn column chart and I want it on the secondary axis .
8/31/2010 6:47:31 PM
The only way I can get it to work is to format the x axis data to time, create the column chart, then in the chart if you want it to show the date and time, format the x axis in the chart to show date and time. What are you trying to add to the secondary axis?
8/31/2010 8:43:48 PM
not sure we are on the same page... I can get the x axis to be date/time, but instead of each date/time & rainfall depth pair being a separate series, I just get one series of the rainfall in one big bar.I need this to be on the secondary axis, as my primary axis is flow data and by convention, flow is on the primary, rainfall is on the secondary.
8/31/2010 8:52:26 PM
I think I know what you want, is it something like this?[Edited on August 31, 2010 at 9:04 PM. Reason : pic]
8/31/2010 9:03:55 PM
yeh, close.specifically, my flow data is a curve connected scatterplot, on the primary axis, with date/time on the x-axis, thus I don't need a stacked column. I'm wanting the rainfall to be on the secondary axis, with date/time on x, and to drop down from the top (just inverting what you have for rain). I know how to do all of this, except to automatically get each date/time & rainfall pair to be a separate series.I can manually do this, by selecting each date/time & rainfall pair as a separate series... but I don't have the time to do that 10,000+ times [Edited on August 31, 2010 at 9:11 PM. Reason : .]
8/31/2010 9:07:23 PM
The only thing I can come up with is this. I am sure you have more options in excel 2010, but I only have 2003 at home (I can check 2010 at work tomorrow). This is the Line - Column on 2 Axes[Edited on August 31, 2010 at 9:37 PM. Reason : forgot the labels][Edited on August 31, 2010 at 9:38 PM. Reason : 2010][Edited on August 31, 2010 at 9:50 PM. Reason : removed the "t" ]
8/31/2010 9:34:44 PM
yeh, that's pretty much it; I can do the other formatting stuff easy enough... now how can I get my rainfall data in that style column on the secondary axis (the primary/secondary axis options are grayed out for my column... not that I can get the column situation right anyways) without having to define 10,000 series manually?oh yeh, remove the "t" from your image url[Edited on August 31, 2010 at 9:39 PM. Reason : .]
8/31/2010 9:38:04 PM
Seems to show you how to do it on 2010, I hope this helps.http://blogs.msdn.com/b/excel/archive/2007/08/24/combining-chart-types-adding-a-second-axis.aspx
8/31/2010 9:48:22 PM