Although Microsoft uses its own names or some, they are principally Cartesian (rectangular), "Radar" (a rather poor type of polar graph with a serious lack of axis-editing functions and a bizarre division of 360º and 0º into two separate points), Pie and Bubble. The last two are more for general presentation than serious mathematical uses. Earlier versions of 'Excel' also included Cone Charts - also a presentation rather than analytical tool - but I'm not sure if these are still offered. They have bar charts, column charts and area charts and also stock charts.
Within these, 'Excel' offers a fairly wide range of detailed versions including combined line-&-column charts and 3-D illusions. Unfortunately, as someone who uses MS 'Excel' spreadsheets and graphs professionally as well as for hobby purposes, the latest versions and their editing functions are over-designed, with vague menus often difficult to find, useful functions removed or cut back and assumptions on use that do not necessarily allow the users the flexibility they need for their own data and purposes.
Yes, Excel is capable of creating many different kinds of charts like Pie, Bar, Column, Scatter, Pivot, Area, Line, Radar, Doughnut, Surface, Bubble and Stock.
info is short for information, there for the info of the charts in excel roughly translates to information of the charts in excel.
Within Excel you can draw all kinds of different shapes and other items. They are graphics. The charts and diagrams that Excel can create are also graphics. Even the icons you click on are graphics.
The most common kind of visuals in Excel are charts. There are lots of types of charts in Excel. Excel also allows you to do other visual things. You can create drawings using the Drawing tools. You can create your own graphics for Excel that way. You can use Smart Art to create lots of kinds of specialised charts and diagrams, such as Organisational Charts. You can bring pictures in from other applications and insert or paste them into Excel. A very creative user could do lots of things with Excel in terms of visuals with all these possibilities.
Charts, as they are known, are part of Excel, so if you do have Excel then you have charts in it and other types of graphs.
Charts are a graphical representation of your data.
Pie and Doughnut charts.
The horizontal axis is the one going across the bottom of a chart. It can be the X axis in some kinds of charts or the category axis in other kinds of charts.
It allows you to make charts or graphs. You will find it in the Charts section of the Insert Ribbon in Excel 2007.
Excel is a spreadsheet application. It can have charts and worksheets in it.
Microsoft Excel can offer as many charts as you need. Trus me, I have taken a computer class. it is endless :)
There are three, not four, different types of sparkline charts in Excel. They are Line, Column, and Win/Loss.There are three, not four, different types of sparkline charts in Excel. They are Line, Column, and Win/Loss.There are three, not four, different types of sparkline charts in Excel. They are Line, Column, and Win/Loss.There are three, not four, different types of sparkline charts in Excel. They are Line, Column, and Win/Loss.There are three, not four, different types of sparkline charts in Excel. They are Line, Column, and Win/Loss.There are three, not four, different types of sparkline charts in Excel. They are Line, Column, and Win/Loss.There are three, not four, different types of sparkline charts in Excel. They are Line, Column, and Win/Loss.There are three, not four, different types of sparkline charts in Excel. They are Line, Column, and Win/Loss.There are three, not four, different types of sparkline charts in Excel. They are Line, Column, and Win/Loss.There are three, not four, different types of sparkline charts in Excel. They are Line, Column, and Win/Loss.There are three, not four, different types of sparkline charts in Excel. They are Line, Column, and Win/Loss.