I know there is such a thing as having two scales on the y-axis when you
are graphing in excel. Is there such a thing as a tertiary scale? If so,
how can you do it?--
paulabrozek
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paulabrozek's Profile: www.excelforum.com/member.php...oamp;userid=30377
View this thread: www.excelforum.com/showthread...hreadid=541566I'm not exactly sure what the benefit would be of a tertiary scale, but you
could probably do this with a helper column somehow.
You could also put the scale values on using Rob Bovey's XY Chart labeler.
Poke around on Jon Peltier's site and see what you find.
www.peltiertech.com
quot;paulabrozekquot; wrote:
gt;
gt; I know there is such a thing as having two scales on the y-axis when you
gt; are graphing in excel. Is there such a thing as a tertiary scale? If so,
gt; how can you do it?
gt;
gt;
gt; --
gt; paulabrozek
gt; ------------------------------------------------------------------------
gt; paulabrozek's Profile: www.excelforum.com/member.php...oamp;userid=30377
gt; View this thread: www.excelforum.com/showthread...hreadid=541566
gt;
gt;
- May 27 Tue 2008 20:44
Charting a tertiary scale
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