Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

From $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Charts: Easy Excel Essentials, #3
Charts: Easy Excel Essentials, #3
Charts: Easy Excel Essentials, #3
Ebook45 pages22 minutes

Charts: Easy Excel Essentials, #3

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Read preview

About this ebook

Charts are a fantastic way to visualize your data. They add a level to your analysis that just isn't possible with data tables and number-crunching.

 

Plus, they're great for presentations where you need to show someone else what you're talking about.

 

And they're easy to learn and use in Excel.

 

So what are you waiting for?

 

Learn how to use column, bar, pie, doughnut, and scatter charts today.

 

The Easy Excel Essentials series of titles are meant to cover one specific topic of interest to users who know the basics of how to navigate Excel but want to increase their knowledge in that one particular area. If you want to increase your Excel knowledge in a more general way, see the Excel Essentials series which consists of Excel for Beginners, Intermediate Excel, and 50 Useful Excel Functions. In that series, charts are covered in Intermediate Excel.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherM.L. Humphrey
Release dateJun 1, 2018
ISBN9781386274780
Charts: Easy Excel Essentials, #3
Author

M.L. Humphrey

Hi there Sci Fi fans, my name is Maurice Humphrey. I am a Vermont native, husband, father, grandfather, well over 60, Navy veteran, retired IBM engineer, retired printer repairman, Graduated: Goddard Jr. College, VT Technical College, and Trinity College. Over the years I've written technical articles, taught technical classes, and presented at technical conventions. I've been reading science fiction for over 50 years now. First books were "Journey to the Centre of the Earth" by Jules Verne and "The Stars Are Ours" by Andre Norton. I've read and collected many great stories, and a considerable amount of junk ones as well. I'd say by now that I probably have a good idea of what I consider a good story.

Read more from M.L. Humphrey

Related to Charts

Titles in the series (6)

View More

Related ebooks

Enterprise Applications For You

View More

Related articles

Related categories

Reviews for Charts

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
0 ratings

0 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    Charts - M.L. Humphrey

    Charts

    Also by M.L. Humphrey

    Easy Excel Essentials

    Pivot Tables

    Conditional Formatting

    Charts

    The IF Functions

    Formatting

    Printing

    Excel Essentials

    Excel for Beginners

    Intermediate Excel

    50 Useful Excel Functions

    50 More Excel Functions


    Excel Essentials Quiz Books

    The Excel for Beginners Quiz Book

    The Intermediate Excel Quiz Book

    The 50 Useful Excel Functions Quiz Book

    The 50 More Excel Functions Quiz Book

    Charts

    Easy Excel Essentials - Volume 3

    M.L. Humphrey

    Contents

    Introduction

    Charts - Types

    Charts - Editing

    Conclusion

    Appendix A: Basic Terminology

    About the Author

    Copyright

    Introduction

    In Excel for Beginners I covered the basics of working in Excel, including how to format in Excel and how to print. In Intermediate Excel I covered a number of intermediate-level topics such as pivot tables, charts, and conditional formatting. And in 50 Useful Excel Functions I covered fifty of the most useful functions you can use in Excel.

    But I realize that some users will just want to know about a specific topic and not buy a guide that covers a variety of other topics that aren’t of interest to them.

    So this series of guides is meant to address that need. Each guide in the series covers one specific topic such as pivot tables, conditional formatting, or charts.

    I’m going to assume in these guides that you have a basic understanding of how to navigate Excel, although each guide does include an Appendix with a brief discussion of basic terminology to make sure that we’re on the same page.

    The guides are written using Excel 2013, which should be similar enough for most users of Excel to follow, but anyone using a version of Excel prior to Excel 2007 probably won’t be able to use them effectively.

    Also, keep in mind that the content in these guides is drawn from Excel for Beginners, Intermediate Excel, and/or 50 Useful Excel Functions, so if you think

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1