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Hi Gaj - I took what you said as cordial, and was just trying to indicate that while such features as notches in a box plot might be useful and common in some disciplines, my experience did not include such features. I must need to adjust my medications, however, as a few times in the past month or so I've been accused of being defensive or offensive, and that is never my intention. I     

Group: microsoft.public.excel.charting · Group Profile · Search for Microsoft Excel Tutorial Online in microsoft.public.excel.charting
Author: Jon Peltier
Date: Jun 20, 2007 12:00

Duh, duh, exhibits ignored, personal defensive stance taken, while my aim was quite the opposite (I thought it was obvious, but apparently ...). Anyway, my point was and is that notched boxplots *ARE* used in "real display of information", "heat of the battle" or whatever one calls that -- at least every now and then. To add to the ignored exhibits (deliberately as diverse as I could find
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Gaj - I'm not an entomologist, nor have I read much on the anthropology of monkeys. I've worked in scientific research as a metallurgist (for my doctorate and a dozen years of employment following that), and as an engineer in manufacturing. Maybe not the widest mathematical background, and I'm not degreed in statistics (though I've taken a graduate level course or three). I've encountered     

Group: microsoft.public.excel.charting · Group Profile · Search for Microsoft Excel Tutorial Online in microsoft.public.excel.charting
Author: Gaj Vidmar
Date: Jun 19, 2007 11:12

Duh, every now and then even proved experts (even with a degree in statistics) say something that leaves me deeply perplexed. Less than five minutes of googling reveals these five fine examples: - Exhibit 1 (electronics / mobile phone manufacturing, 1996) http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/iel3/4031/12221/00561268.pdf?arnumber=561268 - Exhibit 2 (experimental / cognitive psychology, 1996) http
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Jon: Thanks for the all the guidance and assistance. sengke ---------------------------------------------------------- "Jon Peltier" wrote: > > "sengke" <sengke@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:159B66A1-54FF-4856-ACD2-82414F132875@microsoft.com... > > > > > > "Jon Peltier" wrote: > > > >> > >> "sengke" <sengke@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message >     

Group: microsoft.public.excel.charting · Group Profile · Search for Microsoft Excel Tutorial Online in microsoft.public.excel.charting
Author: Jon Peltier
Date: Jun 19, 2007 09:36

"sengke" <sengke@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:159B66A1-54FF-4856-ACD2-82414F132875@microsoft.com... "Jon Peltier" wrote: "sengke" <sengke@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:4BE7C3AB-7965-4952-9734-72F90A84B1AA@microsoft.com... Thanks for the reply. 1. NO 3rd party shareware being added. CONTRIBUTE is a feature in
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"Jon Peltier" wrote: > > "sengke" <sengke@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:4BE7C3AB-7965-4952-9734-72F90A84B1AA@microsoft.com... > > Thanks for the reply. > > > > 1. NO 3rd party shareware being added. CONTRIBUTE is a feature in > > EXCEL2007. My old EXCEL2003 no such menu item. > > You got me. The only reference to "contribute" in Excel 2007 help is to the     

Group: microsoft.public.excel.charting · Group Profile · Search for Microsoft Excel Tutorial Online in microsoft.public.excel.charting
Author: Gaj Vidmar
Date: Jun 19, 2007 07:17

"sengke" <sengke@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:4BE7C3AB-7965-4952-9734-72F90A84B1AA@microsoft.com... Thanks for the reply. 1. NO 3rd party shareware being added. CONTRIBUTE is a feature in EXCEL2007. My old EXCEL2003 no such menu item. You got me. The only reference to "contribute" in Excel 2007 help is to the use of Sharepoint, and "contribute" is used in
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I gave an Excel class for some middle school teachers. Before the class even started, I knew I was in trouble, because they were all saying "I heard that Excel is so hard." I figured that in the two hours I had, the best I could do is make them not afraid of Excel. So we started making things "pretty". They typed text and numbers into cells, they formatted the text, changed cell and border     

Group: microsoft.public.excel.misc · Group Profile · Search for Microsoft Excel Tutorial Online in microsoft.public.excel.misc
Author: sengke
Date: Jun 17, 2008 17:55

Linking to an Access database is a very common task. In a nutshell, create you make a connection to the database. Create a recordset, which retrieves the data you want on an ASP page and then add the fields to the page. This can be done entirely within Dreamweaver. I suggest you google for some tutorials on topics such as "database driven ASP pages" or something like that or look through
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Group: microsoft.public.excel.misc · Group Profile · Search for Microsoft Excel Tutorial Online in microsoft.public.excel.misc
Author: Jon Peltier
Date: Jun 17, 2008 10:23

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Author: sengke
Date: Jun 16, 2008 06:11

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Group: microsoft.public.excel.misc · Group Profile · Search for Microsoft Excel Tutorial Online in microsoft.public.excel.misc
Author: Jon Peltier
Date: Jun 16, 2008 04:59

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Group: microsoft.public.excel.misc · Group Profile · Search for Microsoft Excel Tutorial Online in microsoft.public.excel.misc
Author: Jon Peltier
Date: May 26, 2008 17:49

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Group: macromedia.dreamweaver · Group Profile · Search for Microsoft Excel Tutorial Online in macromedia.dreamweaver
Author: Vix
Date: Apr 29, 2008 05:55

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