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Thread: Trendlines

  1. #1
    Chris
    Guest

    Trendlines

    When describing a trendline for a polynomial, the curve seems to have good
    agreement with the original data, however the displayed equation does not fit
    this fitted curve. There is no agreement with the equation and the trendfit
    line.

    Has anyone else observed this.



  2. #2
    Jerry W. Lewis
    Guest

    Re: Trendlines

    The equation displayed on a chart is heavily rounded. Right click on
    the equation and format for scientific notation with 14 decimal places.

    Another common problem is fitting a trend on a "Line" chart instead of
    an "XY (Scatter)" chart. "Line" chart is an extremely misleading name.
    It has nothing to do with whether you want to connect the points with
    a line or not. Rather, a "Line" chart specifices that x-data (if given
    at all) is to be treated as category labels rather than numbers. If you
    fit a trend to a "Line" chart, the x-data for that trend will be
    1,2,3,... regardless of the user supplied x-data.

    You can fit polynomials with LINEST() and TREND() worksheet functions,
    but it is easy to create very ill-conditioned polynomial fits, where the
    worksheet functions perform poorly compared to the chart trendline fit.

    Jerry

    Chris wrote:

    > When describing a trendline for a polynomial, the curve seems to have good
    > agreement with the original data, however the displayed equation does not fit
    > this fitted curve. There is no agreement with the equation and the trendfit
    > line.
    >
    > Has anyone else observed this.



  3. #3
    Jon Peltier
    Guest

    Re: Trendlines

    Chris -

    Probably you are not looking at the equation with sufficient digits.
    Select the formula, and use the Increase Decimal button on the
    Formatting toolbar, or apply a scientific number format with lots of digits.

    - Jon
    -------
    Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP
    Peltier Technical Services
    Tutorials and Custom Solutions
    http://PeltierTech.com/
    _______

    Chris wrote:

    > When describing a trendline for a polynomial, the curve seems to have good
    > agreement with the original data, however the displayed equation does not fit
    > this fitted curve. There is no agreement with the equation and the trendfit
    > line.
    >
    > Has anyone else observed this.
    >
    >


  4. #4
    fernando cinquegrani
    Guest

    Re: Trendlines

    In news:AADF8899-F8F8-487D-B80B-EDEA8566C952@microsoft.com,
    Chris scrive:
    > When describing a trendline for a polynomial, the curve seems to have good
    > agreement with the original data, however the displayed equation does not fit
    > this fitted curve. There is no agreement with the equation and the trendfit
    > line.


    change the order value in K1
    http://www.prodomosua.it/zips/coefficienti.xls
    .f



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