If it is moved to be a chart on its own, that is known as a Chart Sheet, not a worksheet, and its name will be Chart1. A Chart sheet, unlike a worksheet, just has a chart and has no cells. Moving a chart from a worksheet will not affect that worksheet's name. So in this case, it would still be Sheet1. If you move a chart to another worksheet, embedding it there, that does not affect the name of that worksheet. So it could b embedded on Sheet2 or Sheet3 or whatever name may have been given to it.
Yes, a chart in Excel is created from data that has been selected in the worksheet.
A column chart.
Initially there are 3 sheets when you open Excel. They are called Sheet1, Sheet2 and Sheet3. More sheets can be added and any sheet can be renamed.
The benefit of linking a chart from an Excel worksheet to a Word document is that the chart data will always be current. Excel is spreadsheet software from Microsoft.
Excel is a spreadsheet application. It can have charts and worksheets in it.
A column chart.
An embedded chart.
A chart can be saved on the same worksheet or on a separate worksheet in Excel. The easiest way to put a chart on a separate worksheet is to create your chart on the same worksheet as your data. After you create your chart, just cut and past to the worksheet where you want it to show.
by default what themes is applied to a chart when it is copies from excel and pasted into word
Yes, a chart can be displayed with the data on the worksheet. In that case it is known as an embedded chart. It can also be displayed by itself on what is known as a chart sheet, where you won't see the actual data it uses.
It is like a small line chart that fits inside a cell. It can be positioned on a worksheet, usually close to the values it is charting.
By default there is no border around a chart title. When you do set a border the default colour is black.