A graph, known as a chart in Excel, is a visual representation of data. There are different kinds of charts, used for different kinds of data. For some people seeing a chart is easier than looking at lots of numbers to help them understand the data. For an individual chart, you would have to see it to explain it. To help, charts have main labels and also ones on the axes, for charts that have them. A legend in a chart can explain what the specific colours that you see mean. If designed properly, a chart is a very useful tool in working with a spreadsheet.
As Excel starts you will see the words Microsoft Excel in the title bar. After a few seconds the first worksheet will appear and then in the title bar a hyphen and Book1 will also appear beside Microsoft Excel. So what you will see is this: Microsoft Excel - Book1
after creating your graph go to the layout tab, axis title then choose either horizontal or vertical axis
First, you enter your data into the entry boxes on the spreadsheet. You highlight it all but the title. Then, go up to the taskbar and choose ChartWizard. Chhose the type of graph you would like (In this case, bar) and enter the data it asks for from there.
You can click into the title and type a new one. You can also do it through the Chart Options.
To plot an Acceleration vs sin theta graph in Microsoft Excel, you first need to have the data for acceleration and sin theta in two columns. Then select the two columns of data, go to the "Insert" tab, choose "Scatter" from the charts group, and then select a scatter plot with data points only. Finally, customize your graph by adding axis labels and a title.
A thin bar at the top of the window containing the title and possibly buttons
To put a title on any chat in Microsoft Excel you need to apply a chart layout that has a title and then you can change it. Or you can add a title manually by clicking on the layouts tab, then layouts, and then chart title.
By default there is no border around a chart title. When you do set a border the default colour is black.
Not necessarily. If you are doing it as part of an official or formal or legal document and using the title Microsoft Excel, then you could do it. For more basic things, there is no need to.
The title bar.
When worksheets are grouped in Microsoft Excel, the Title Bar displays the name of the active workbook followed by the phrase "Group" or "Group of [number] Sheets." This indicates that multiple worksheets are currently selected and any changes made will affect all grouped sheets simultaneously. The title helps users recognize that they are working in a grouped state to prevent unintended edits to individual sheets.
The title bar in Microsoft Word typically displays the document's name along with the application name (e.g., "Document1 - Word"). In contrast, the title bar in Excel shows the name of the active workbook along with the application name (e.g., "Book1 - Excel"). Additionally, the Excel title bar may indicate the active sheet within the workbook, while Word's title bar focuses solely on the document. Both title bars include window management controls, but their content reflects the specific type of document being worked on.