Adobe illustrator 10 Manuale Utente

Pagina di 431
 | 
Back
388  
Adobe Illustrator Help
Using Graphs 
 | 
Back
388  
Select the graph type and options you want. (See 
Apply the selected data to an axis by selecting On Right Side, On Left Side, On Top Side, 
or on Bottom Side from the Value Axis pop-up menu and click OK.
Use the group-selection tool   again to select a different set of data on which to apply a 
different graph type, and which will be assigned to a different axis. 
Perform steps 2 through 4 again on the new data, creating a different graph type and 
assigning the data to the opposite axis, and then click OK.
Exporting graph designs to other files
You can create a custom startup file that contains the graph designs you use most 
frequently. The graph designs contained in the startup file then appear in the graph 
design list in the Graph Design dialog box and are available in every new Adobe Illustrator 
file you create. (See 
Customizing a graph
You can customize a graph in numerous ways. You can change the colors of shading; 
change the typeface and type style; and move, reflect, shear, rotate, or scale any or all of 
the graph. You can use customized column and marker designs. You can also use styles to 
apply transparency, gradients, blends, brush strokes, and other effects to graphs.
About graph elements
It is essential to keep in mind when you customize a graph that a graph is a grouped 
object that is related to its data. Never ungroup the graph; if you do, you cannot change 
the graph. To edit a graph, you select the parts you want to edit without ungrouping the 
graph, using either the direct-selection tool or the group-selection tool. 
It is also important to understand how elements of a graph are related. The entire graph 
with its legends is one group. All the sets of data are a subgroup of the graph; in turn, each 
set of data with its legend box is a subgroup of all the sets of data. Each value is a 
subgroup of its set of data, and so on. Never ungroup or regroup objects that are within 
the group.
You can see the hierarchy of grouping within a graph by creating a column graph with two 
or more columns of data. The first column in the first cluster of columns is grouped with 
the first column in the next cluster of columns. In addition, the group of the first columns 
is grouped with the first legend.
Selecting parts of a graph 
If you want to select some objects in a graph and send them to the back or front of other 
objects, it’s important that you send only objects that represent an entire set of data or 
individual numbers. You can select individual columns, lines, pie wedges, or series and 
move them to the front or back. Do not, however, select and move individual category 
labels, individual legend labels, individual axis tick lines, individual axis tick labels, or 
vertical or horizontal axis lines.