3d line charts which work perfectly well on a pc with Excel 2003 cause Excel
2007 to hang when opened on my Vista pc with Excel 2007.
I hope this is something which can be fixed when Service Pack 1 is released
for Office 2007, as it is a very useful chart feature which we (and our
clients) use a lot in one area of our work, and it may prevent our clients
from migrating from Office 2003 to Office 2007.
- Jon
-------
Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP
Tutorials and Custom Solutions
Peltier Technical Services, Inc. - http://PeltierTech.com
_______
"Patrick Lee" <Patri...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:0139F204-003F-4A4B...@microsoft.com...
- Jon
-------
Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP
Peltier Technical Services, Inc.
774-275-0064
208-485-0691 fax
j...@peltiertech.com
http://PeltierTech.com/
_______
"Patrick Lee" <Patri...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:8F75A664-4D62-4650...@microsoft.com...
In the real world of data, there are more than *three* dimensions. If
you need a spatial metaphor to represent a dimension, you're screwed the
first time you encounter a data set with four dimensions or more.
Experienced consultants like Jon can render for their clients four or
more dimensions on a two-dimensional piece of paper, with greater
clarity and punch than anyone can achieve with a "3D" Excel bar chart.
--
Del Cotter
NB Personal replies to this post will send email to d...@branta.demon.co.uk,
which goes to a spam folder-- please send your email to del3 instead.
Your least bad option for the sort of bulk 3D data that you want to
plot would be a contour diagram or false colour image of the dependant
variable as a function of calendar year and age.
> wouldn't it be
> more constructive to address the issue, which is that since3Dcharts ARE
> part ofExcel2007 but currentlycauseit to freeze, it would be good if
> Microsoft fixed this in the next Service Pack or earlier?
Does it freeze in all cases even for trivial small test data, or just
for specific large datasets?
Your other alternative is to avoid Excel 2007 altogether until they
fix the bug.
Regards,
Martin Brown
"Martin Brown" wrote:
Martin - thank you for the response.
You wrote:
> Your least bad option for the sort of bulk 3D data that you want to
> plot would be a contour diagram or false colour image of the dependant
> variable as a function of calendar year and age.
>
How do I produce these 2 types of charts using Excel 2007? I've tried the
standard types, including Scatter and Area but they don't produce what is
needed.
>
> Does it freeze in all cases even for trivial small test data, or just
> for specific large datasets?
>
> Your other alternative is to avoid Excel 2007 altogether until they
> fix the bug.
>
My full data set has 20,200 numbers (101 rows [ages] by 200 columns
[calendar years]). Experiments show that freezing doesn't occur for trivial
small data, but it does start to occur (at least on my Dell Inspiron 9300
notebook with a 2GHz Pentium M processor and 2GB of RAM, running Windows
Vista Ultimate) with more than 4000 numbers (e.g. 20 rows by 200 columns),
getting progressively worse of course as the volume of data increases.
For the moment, we are avoiding producing 3D graphs in Excel 2007 (we can
use Excel 2003 on other pcs for such graphs).
The key issue for us here is to make sure (contrary to Jon's and Del's
comments so far which are not helpful because they give the impression that
3D graphs are not important, I'm afraid that is just plain wrong) that
Microsoft is aware that this is an important issue which needs to be fixed.
A great many people have upgraded to 2007 without testing their most
important work on it first. The excruciatingly slow chart rendering for
"large" (i.e., small in 2003) data sets is a well known issue with Excel
2007. Microsoft knowledge base article kb938538
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/938538) describes a recent hotfix which I
found improves the problem somewhat, though it's still way slower than in
2003.
- Jon
-------
Jon Peltier, Microsoft Excel MVP
Tutorials and Custom Solutions
Peltier Technical Services, Inc. - http://PeltierTech.com
_______
"Patrick Lee" <Patri...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:985B791D-BE43-4D02...@microsoft.com...
If you have Mathcad, you may already know it can produce 3d charts
Excel cannot (will it ever?).
Mathcad charting has its own limitations, too. But if its 3d charts
fit your needs, try the excel addin from the mathcad web site. It
enables you to get mathcad's 3d charts right on an excel worksheet,
plotting data from the worksheet.
Brian Murphy