To the right is the old default chart from Excel. If you charted this line in an older version of Excel, the chart would evenly space out each observation, leading you to believe that the sales were nearly linear over time. Sometimes it was a week between observations, other times when sales were heating up, it was just a day or two. Josh is only 8, so he did not record the total sales each day. To the left are cumulative sales from Josh's popcorn sales drive. This is fine is your categories are 'apples, bananas, cherries' but does not make sense if each data point is a date value and the dates are not equally spaced. In older versions of Excel, the chart wizard would assume the X-axis is a 'category' type axis and spread each data point out equally across the X axis. When Excel creates my chart, it spaces each data point out equally, giving a misleading result. The Excel data points are randomly spaced, so there is not an equivalent amount of time between each data point. The Excel data that I have needs to be plotted against time down to the minute. I have a small problem regarding the x-axis on Excel charts. For you to be able to download the trial version of Adobe After Effects for Windows or Mac successfully, you must have the administrative privileges for the user account you are using in your computer. The Adobe After Effects free trial version lets you evaluate the software for free before you buy or subscribe.
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