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Stacked Bar Chart - used for a Tornado Chart

  1. #1

    Stacked Bar Chart - used for a Tornado Chart

    I've been using Excel to develop a tornado chart in a sheet I'm using.

    I've used a stacked bar chart with a blanked out first bar to float the
    remaining bar(s) - and this has worked fine - and I have managed to get
    the chart to be able to automatically reflect scenarios where the
    min/max values are both negative, positive and a positive/negative mix.

    The last task that I want to do is to put a single 'line' on the chart
    to indicate the baseline value of the tornado - so it runs top to
    bottom through the bars.

    As this is going in a model I want this to be automatic rather than
    hardcoding this into the chart

    Any ideas - its annoying me to death

    Steve


  2. #2
    Andy Pope
    Guest

    Re: Stacked Bar Chart - used for a Tornado Chart

    Hi,

    Do this help at all.
    http://www.andypope.info/ngs/ng3.htm

    Cheers
    Andy

    [email protected] wrote:
    > I've been using Excel to develop a tornado chart in a sheet I'm using.
    >
    > I've used a stacked bar chart with a blanked out first bar to float the
    > remaining bar(s) - and this has worked fine - and I have managed to get
    > the chart to be able to automatically reflect scenarios where the
    > min/max values are both negative, positive and a positive/negative mix.
    >
    > The last task that I want to do is to put a single 'line' on the chart
    > to indicate the baseline value of the tornado - so it runs top to
    > bottom through the bars.
    >
    > As this is going in a model I want this to be automatic rather than
    > hardcoding this into the chart
    >
    > Any ideas - its annoying me to death
    >
    > Steve
    >


    --

    Andy Pope, Microsoft MVP - Excel
    http://www.andypope.info

  3. #3
    stevieb
    Guest

    Re: Stacked Bar Chart - used for a Tornado Chart

    Thanks for the reply

    I've actually managed to put in the line I wanted down the average
    value by reseting the y-axis to cross the x-axis at the average value
    rather than the 0 default - this has worked well

    So basically I've now got an in-sheet method based on 4 cell based
    formula per sensitivity parameter which I then feed into a stacked bar
    chart - and then I reset the y-axis crossing

    This produces a nice looking Tornado plot without the need for an Excel
    add-in

    I'll post this as an example when I get time to tidy it up a little

    Steve


  4. #4
    Jon Peltier
    Guest

    Re: Stacked Bar Chart - used for a Tornado Chart

    Steve -

    If you want to write it up, I could post it on my site as an alternative to

    http://peltiertech.com/Excel/Charts/tornadochart.html

    - Jon
    -------
    Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP
    Peltier Technical Services - Tutorials and Custom Solutions -
    http://PeltierTech.com/
    2006 Excel User Conference, 19-21 April, Atlantic City, NJ
    http://peltiertech.com/Excel/ExcelUserConf06.html
    _______

    "stevieb" <[email protected]> wrote in message
    news:[email protected]...
    > Thanks for the reply
    >
    > I've actually managed to put in the line I wanted down the average
    > value by reseting the y-axis to cross the x-axis at the average value
    > rather than the 0 default - this has worked well
    >
    > So basically I've now got an in-sheet method based on 4 cell based
    > formula per sensitivity parameter which I then feed into a stacked bar
    > chart - and then I reset the y-axis crossing
    >
    > This produces a nice looking Tornado plot without the need for an Excel
    > add-in
    >
    > I'll post this as an example when I get time to tidy it up a little
    >
    > Steve
    >




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