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Format the line series as a thicker line.Īlthough Professor Franklin's innovative chart and blog feature mostly political charts, you can easily adapt this concept to your business. In the Design ribbon, change the chart type to a scatter chart with straight lines.In the Layout ribbon, select the new series from the Current Selection drop-down.Grab the top-right handle on the blue outline and drag to the right to incorporate the data in the third column. A blue outline appears around the data in the second column. Format the data series to use a light-colored marker of a small size.Build a chart based on the first two columns.The results of the pivot table appear in the fourth and fifth columns.įigure 3.41 The underlying detail used to create the chart in Figure 3.40. Dot scores appear in the second column, and line scores appear once per month in the third column. Figure 3.41 shows a few rows of the dataset. The goal is to report the average month in the first row for each month and then use #N/A values for the remaining rows for that month. In column C, build a formula that gathers the average score for each month.
The pivot table should have month in the row area and average of score in the data area.