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Tips.Net > ExcelTips Home > Charts > Creating Charts > Controlling the Plotting of Empty Cells

Controlling the Plotting of Empty Cells

Summary: Excel provides a great deal of control in how it constructs a chart based on worksheet data. This tip explains how you can configure Excel to treat empty cells in different ways. (This tip works with Microsoft Excel 97, Excel 2000, Excel 2002, and Excel 2003.)

When you create a chart from a data table, Excel does its best to translate the numeric values into data points on a chart, according to the specifications you provide. One area where Excel doesn't quite know what to do, however, is empty cells. If a cell is empty, it could be for any number of reasons--the value isn't available, the value isn't important, or the value is really zero. You can instruct Excel how you want it to treat empty cells when creating a chart:

  1. Choose Options from the Tools menu. Excel displays the Options dialog box.
  2. Make sure the Chart tab is displayed. (Click here to see a related figure.)
  3. Using the option buttons at the top of the dialog box, specify how you want Excel to chart empty cells.
  4. Click OK.

If the option buttons are not available at the top of the screen, it means that you don't have a chart visible on the screen. The option buttons provide three different settings:

  • Not Plotted. Excel leaves gaps in the chart where the empty cells appear.
  • Zero. Excel treats the empty cells as if they contained zero values, and plots accordingly.
  • Interpolated. Excel examines the values surrounding the empty cell and guesses what value the cell should contain based on those values.

Tip #3054 applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003


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