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Table Of Contents
- User’s Guide
- Contents
- Welcome to Pages
- Overview of Pages
- Creating a Document Using the Pages Templates
- Formatting a Document’s Layout and Table of Contents
- Setting Page Orientation and Size
- Setting Page Margins
- Creating Columns
- Varying Column and Page Layouts
- Creating a Document With Left- and Right-Facing Pages
- Adding Headers, Footers, Page Numbers, Footnotes, and Endnotes
- Varying Document Formatting Using Section Breaks
- Adding a Repeated Background Image
- Using a Table of Contents
- Formatting Text and Paragraphs
- Working With Styles
- Working With Graphics andOther Media
- Changing Object Properties
- Creating Tables
- Adding a Table
- Using Table Cells and Borders
- Formatting Tables
- Adding Images or Background Colors
- Formatting Numbers
- Sorting Cells
- Autofilling
- Using Formulas
- A Tour of Using Formulas
- Adding a Quick Formula
- Removing a Formula
- Using the Formula Editor to Add and Edit Formulas
- Using Cell References
- Adding a Formula to Multiple Cells
- Performing Arithmetic Operations
- Using Predefined Functions
- Operators and Functions for Advanced Table Formula Users
- Defining Formulas That Use Operators
- Defining Formulas That Use Functions
- Creating Charts
- Personalizing Documents With Address Book Data
- Printing and Exporting Your Document to Other Formats
- Designing Your Own Document Templates
- Index
Chapter 9 Creating Charts 201
For this chart, the data series are represented by columns in the Chart Data Editor
pictured earlier. There are now four data series represented as four different-colored
bars.
Data series are represented differently in the different kinds of charts provided by
Pages.
 In column charts and bar charts, a data series is represented by a series of bars in
the same color (as shown above).
 In a line chart (also called a graph), a data series is represented by a single line.
 In an area chart, a data series is represented by an area shape.
 In a pie chart, only a single data set—the first data point in each series—is
represented on the chart (whichever is listed first in the Chart Data Editor).
 In a scatter chart, two columns of data are used to plot values for a single data
series. Each pair of values determines the position of one data point.
Adding a Chart
Charts can be added inline with text or fixed on the page. (To learn about fixed and
inline objects, see “Fixed Objects Versus Inline Objects” on page 124.) After you have
added the chart to the page, you can change the chart type and format it by using
the Chart Inspector, pictured later in this chapter.
These two bars represent
one data series.
The data sets contain
one data point (one bar)
from each of the four
data series.