
Tips.Net > ExcelTips Home > Charts > Printing Charts > Preparing a Chart Sheet for Printing
Summary: Excel allows you to create charts in two general formats: on their own sheet or as an embedded object in a worksheet. If you’ve created a chart sheet, you have some special formatting capabilities provided by Excel that you can use to get the sheet ready for printing. This tip describes how you take advantage of those capabilities. (This tip works with Microsoft Excel 97, Excel 2000, Excel 2002, and Excel 2003.)
Excel allows you to use two types of charts: embedded charts and chart sheets. Since an embedded chart is included as part of a regular worksheet, you can print one just as you would any other worksheet.
Chart sheets, on the other hand, take a bit more preparation in order to print. To modify how a chart sheet appears, select the Page Setup command from the File menu, and make sure you select the Chart tab. (Click here to see a related figure.) From the resulting dialog box you can select the quality of the printout and specify how much of the printed page the chart should occupy.
Since a chart sheet is, by nature, an entire sheet of paper, the default selection is Use Full Page. You can also choose either of the other options (Scale to Fit Page or Custom) to specify a different page size, however. If you choose either of these options and click on OK, Excel places a dashed line around the chart area. If you use the mouse to click on this line, sizing handles will appear around the image.
As with any other graphics image, you can size the chart sheet. As you move the mouse pointer over the sizing handles, it changes to a sizing arrow. Click on a sizing handle and drag the border of the chart to reflect the size you want to use. The direction of the arrowheads on the sizing arrows indicate the direction you can move the border. When you release the mouse button, the chart is resized and redrawn automatically.
Tip #2849 applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 97 2000 2002 2003
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