"Kate" <Ka...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:8F1F7A54-7ABA-4D7B...@microsoft.com...
Here is a little more detail -
1. If you format the cell in the spreadsheet with super/sub script that will
not be interpreted any place on the chart correctly.
2. If your superscript happens to be one of a very few characters which
actually have a superscript character in their character sets you can use
that. For example, if you are using Arial you will find it has a
superscripted 2 and 3. You can get to these via Insert, Symbol.
Unfortunately this option is very limited, I have 600 font sets on my
computer and none are strictly superscript, but maybe someone has created a
font set that does this.
3. In certain limited areas of the chart you can select individual
characters and use Excel's superscript command. This works for any text for
which you can select individual characters (it also works for text you can't
individually select but that pretty useless). You can't select the
characters in the legend, or the axis elements for example, but you can
select individual characters in the titles, data labels and textboxes.
Depending on how much you need these in one of the areas that doesn't allow
it you can create dummy items to handle it. This is a lot of work and not
very satisfactory, but you can create superscripted axis entries by using a
dummy data series for the axis and applying data labels, or using text boxes
over the legend areas.
If you want a sample of one of these, tell me which one and what version of
Excel you are using and I'll send you one.
You can Google Superscript fonts and download a fontset if you can find one
you like.
--
Cheers,
Shane Devenshire
Brian Reilly, PowerPoint MVP
If your only real property of interest is sub- and superscripting, it should
work well enough.
- Jon
-------
Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP
Tutorials and Custom Solutions
Peltier Technical Services, Inc. - http://PeltierTech.com
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"Brian Reilly, MVP" <br...@notreillyand.com> wrote in message
news:aed4o3deln7in508k...@4ax.com...
Brian Reilly, PowerPoint MVP