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FileMaker Customer Support Page 1 of 25 A. Introduction B. Common Terminology C. Introduction to Chart Types D. Creating a Chart in FileMaker E. About Quick Charts 1. Quick Chart Behavior When Based on Sort Order F. Chart Examples 1. Charting Summary Data 2. Charting Summary Data pt. 2 3. Charting Multiple Data Series from One Source Field ABOUT THIS DOCUMENT This document will help you better understand charting in FileMaker Pro, and will assist in the creation and planning of charts. This document focuses on the creation of basic charts rather than the details of chart configuration. You may need to refer to FileMaker Pro Help, documentation or the FileMaker forums for more advanced assistance. For further details on configuration, please review the Charting topics listed in FileMaker Pro Help menu > New features in FileMaker Pro 12. Note: In this document, FileMaker Pro will refer to both FileMaker Pro and FileMaker Pro Advanced unless specified. This document is specifically relevant to FileMaker Pro 12 and later versions. ABOUT CHARTS/COMMON TERMINOLOGY Axis FileMaker charts data points in a two dimensional plane consisting of the xaxis, or horizontal line, and yaxis or vertical line. Data falls into an xaxis/yaxis coordinate point. The accumulation of these data points forms your chart. As an example, in Figure A1, 2011 real estate monthly sales totals are tracked. The months are listed along the xaxis while sales figures are listed on the yaxis. In the chart, the value $9,938,575 takes its appropriate height along the yaxis and is referenced against April on the xaxis. This value represents a data point on the chart. Figure B1

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Page 1: File Type pdf Introduction to FileMaker 12 ... - Find Answerhelp.filemaker.com/ci/fattach/get/74738/0/filename/Introduction+to... · FileMaker)Customer)Support) ) Page2)of25) ))))

FileMaker  Customer  Support     Page  1  of  25    

A.    Introduction  B.    Common  Terminology  C.    Introduction  to  Chart  Types  D.    Creating  a  Chart  in  FileMaker  E.    About  Quick  Charts  

1.    Quick  Chart  Behavior  When  Based  on  Sort  Order  F.    Chart  Examples  

1.    Charting  Summary  Data  2.    Charting  Summary  Data  pt.  2  3.    Charting  Multiple  Data  Series  from  One  Source  Field    

   ABOUT  THIS  DOCUMENT    This  document  will  help  you  better  understand  charting  in  FileMaker  Pro,  and  will  assist  in  the  creation  and  planning  of  charts.    This  document  focuses  on  the  creation  of  basic  charts  rather  than  the  details  of  chart  configuration.    You  may  need  to  refer  to  FileMaker  Pro  Help,  documentation  or  the  FileMaker  forums  for  more  advanced  assistance.        For  further  details  on  configuration,  please  review  the  Charting  topics  listed  in  FileMaker  Pro  Help  menu  >  New  features  in  FileMaker  Pro  12.    Note:  In  this  document,  FileMaker  Pro  will  refer  to  both  FileMaker  Pro  and  FileMaker  Pro  Advanced  unless  specified.    This  document  is  specifically  relevant  to  FileMaker  Pro  12  and  later  versions.      ABOUT  CHARTS/COMMON  TERMINOLOGY    Axis  FileMaker  charts  data  points  in  a  two  dimensional  plane  consisting  of  the  x-­‐axis,  or  horizontal  line,  and  y-­‐axis  or  vertical  line.    Data  falls  into  an  x-­‐axis/y-­‐axis  coordinate  point.    The  accumulation  of  these  data  points  forms  your  chart.        As  an  example,  in  Figure  A-­‐1,  2011  real  estate  monthly  sales  totals  are  tracked.    The  months  are  listed  along  the  x-­‐axis  while  sales  figures  are  listed  on  the  y-­‐axis.    In  the  chart,  the  value  $9,938,575  takes  its  appropriate  height  along  the  y-­‐axis  and  is  referenced  against  April  on  the  x-­‐axis.    This  value  represents  a  data  point  on  the  chart.    Figure  B-­‐1  

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     Chart  Setup  dialog  Charts  and  quick  charts  are  configured  through  the  chart  setup  dialog.    This  dialog  consists  of  two  sections:  the  preview  pane  and  the  chart  inspector.    The  preview  pane  gives  a  live  preview  of  the  chart  while  the  chart  inspector  allows  you  to  add  fields,  change  styles,  etc.    Data  Series  Data  points  that  are  plotted  in  your  chart.    For  example,  a  value  for  January  2011  would  represent  a  data  point.    The  values  for  January-­‐December  2011  would  represent  a  data  series.    When  multiple  data  series  are  charted,  each  data  series  is  displayed  in  its  own  color  and  is  defined  in  the  chart’s  legend,  if  included.    Data  Source  The  data  source  is  where  FileMaker  will  look  to  grab  chartable  data.    There  are  three  options:  -­‐Current  Found  Set  will  chart  the  records  currently  being  browsed.  -­‐Current  Record  (delimited  data)  will  chart  multiple  data  entries  from  a  single  field  when  each  data  value  in  the  filed  is  separated  by  a  carriage-­‐return  character.  -­‐Related  Records  will  chart  data  existing  in  related  records    Layout  Part  -­‐  A  section  of  a  layout  that  organizes  or  summarizes  information.  Layout  parts  include  Body,  Header,  Footer,  Title  Header,  Title  Footer,  leading  and  trailing  Grand  Summary,  and  leading  and  trailing  Subsummary.    Layout  parts  affect  how  data  is  charted:  

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   Legend  A  key  that  identifies  the  colors  assigned  to  a  data  series  in  a  chart.    As  an  example,  in  a  bar  chart  comparing  total  sales  by  year,  a  legend  might  help  indicate  which  colored  bar  references  which  year.    Quick  Chart  Quick  charts  refer  to  charts  created  directly  within  Browse  mode.    Summarized  Data  Contains  the  result  of  a  summary  calculation  of  values  across  a  group  of  records.      INTRODUCTION  TO  CHART  TYPES    Column  and  Bar  charts  Column  and  bar  charts  are  typically  used  to  compare  two  or  more  numerical  values  taken  on  different  dates  (amount  of  homes  shown  the  week  of  October  1st  vs.  the  amount  of  homes  shown  the  week  of  October  8th)  or  under  different  conditions  (amount  of  short  sale  homes  closed  vs.  amount  of  private  owners  homes  closed  for  October).    Column  and  bar  charts  can  be  used  to  compare  single  or  multiple  data  categories.    To  compare  3rd  quarter  real  estate  sales  figures  for  2010  and  2011,  a  multi-­‐series  column  or  bar  chart  is  used.    

               

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   Stacked  Column  and  Bar  chart  The  stacked  column  and  bar  charts  are  used  to  compare  two  or  more  numerical  taken  on  different  dates  or  under  different  conditions.    However,  stacked  column  and  bar  charts  are  also  used  to  compare  parts  to  the  whole.      In  the  example  below,  a  stacked  column  chart  is  used  to  analyze  total  number  of  homes  sold  between  April,  May,  and  June  2011.    Each  column  further  displays  how  many  private  owner,  short  sales,  and  foreclosures  were  sold  within  each  month.      

     Positive/negative  column  chart  Use  a  positive/negative  column  chart  to  compare  positive  and  negative  values.  Positive  values  appear  above  a  mid-­‐point  (zero,  by  default  although  the  mid-­‐point  is  customizable)  and  negative  values  appear  below  the  mid-­‐point.    A  real  estate  employee  uses  the  positive/negative  chart  to  track  whether  their  quarterly  sales  quotas  were  met.    In  this  chart,  the  custom  mid-­‐point  is  set  to  $300,000.  

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   Line  chart  A  line  chart  shows  data  that  changes  continuously  over  time.    Line  charts  connect  a  contiguous  series  of  data  points  with  a  line.    Each  data  point  represents  an  individual  measurement.    Line  charts  are  good  for  showing  the  rise  and  fall  of  data  over  time    In  the  example  below,  a  line  chart  is  used  to  visualize  the  sales  trends  between  2009-­‐2011.        

     Pie  Chart  Show  the  relationship  of  each  data  series  value  to  the  total  of  all  data  in  the  series  charted.    A  pie  chart  is  best  for  showing  proportions  within  a  single  data  series.    You  can  display  percentage  values  for  each  data  point  (slice  of  the  pie).    In  the  example  below,  a  pie  chart  is  used  to  display  each  office's  yearly  sales  totals  in  proportion  to  their  overall  part  in  their  company’s  gross.    

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       Scatter  Plot  chart  A  Scatter  plot  is  used  to  display  a  correlation  between  two  variables.    If  the  trend  of  data  values  rises  from  left  to  right,  the  trend  is  considered  positive.    If  the  trend  falls  from  left  to  right,  the  trend  is  considered  negative.    If  data  points  reveal  no  clear  slope,  the  data  is  considered  not  correlated.    A  scatter  chart  can  compare  large  numbers  of  data  points  without  regard  to  time.    Use  a  scatter  chart  to  compare  the  number  of  beverages  sold  at  a  restaurant  as  the  temperature  changed  throughout  the  day.    In  this  example,  the  Scatter  Plot  chart  is  used  to  determine  any  correlation  between  the  down  payment  paid  and  first  time  home  buyers.    

     

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Bubble  chart  Aside  from  the  x  and  y  axis,  a  bubble  chart  introduces  a  third  variable:  the  radius  of  each  bubble.    Bubble  charts  compare  individual  data  points  in  terms  of  size  or  magnitude.    In  this  example,  a  Bubble  chart  is  used  to  compare  one  office’s  sales  team  based  on  the  amount  of  homes  sold,  the  average  price  of  the  home,  and  the  total  amount  of  sales.    

     CREATING  A  CHART  IN  FILEMAKER    Note:  Go  to  FileMaker  Pro  >  Help  for  examples  on  how  to  create  additional  charts.    Begin  by  determining  which  chart  type  will  best  get  the  point  across.    Is  the  goal  a  comparison  of  two  or  more  numeric  values  over  a  period  of  time  (bar,  column  chart)?    Display  percentages  (stacked  column,  pie  chart)?    In  this  example,  a  line  chart  will  best  visualize  total  monthly  sales  trends  for  2009,  2010,  and  2011.    Each  line  is  referred  to  as  a  data  series,  or  data  points  being  tracked.    For  instance,  2011's  monthly  sales  figures  (January  total,  February  total,  March  total,  etc.)  represent  2011's  data  series.    Figure  D-­‐1  

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     Assume  that  each  data  series  exists  within  three  individual  fields  in  FileMaker  alongside  a  Month  field  (Figure  D-­‐2).      Figure  D-­‐2  

     

Go  to  View  >  Layout  Mode  and  click  the  chart  icon    in  the  toolbar;  the  cursor  will  change  from  pointer  to  a  plus  sign.    Click,  hold,  and  draw  the  chart  to  its  desired  size  in  an  open  area  of  the  layout.    Once  the  object  is  drawn,  the  Chart  Setup  window  will  appear  (Figure  D-­‐3).    The  Chart  Setup  window  is  divided  into  two  areas:  a  preview  pane  and  the  Chart  Inspector.    Figure  D-­‐3  

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                                                                                                   Preview  Pane                                                                                            Chart  Inspector  

 As  fields  and  settings  are  configured,  a  live  preview  of  the  chart  will  be  displayed.    Note:  Depending  on  the  size  of  data  being  charted,  FileMaker  may  take  a  few  moments  to  fully  render  the  chart.    At  any  point  in  the  process,  stop  FileMaker  from  

rendering  the  chart  by  clicking  the  pause  icon    located  in  the  lower  right  corner  of  the  preview  pane.    Additionally,  the  options  'Use  actual  data'  or  'Use  sample  data'  can  be  selected  in  a  drop  down  menu  to  the  right  of  the  pause  icon.    When  the  option  'Use  sample  data'  is  selected,  the  image  in  the  preview  pane  will  not  reflect  the  current  or  final  result.    However,  because  FileMaker  is  not  rendering  actual  data  with  every  change,  'Use  sample  data'  can  be  beneficial  when  working  with  larger  databases  or  more  complex  charts.      The  chart  inspector  (Figure  D-­‐4)  to  the  right  of  the  preview  pane  has  three  sections  for  configuration:  

• Chart  -­‐  Add  and  remove  data  series,  chart  legends,  titles  • Styles  -­‐  Change  colors,  font  • Data  Source  -­‐  Specify  current  found  set,  delimited  data,  related  data  

 Figure  D-­‐4  

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   Chart  Setup  Window  >  Chart  Values  for  the  Title,  X-­‐Axis,  and  Y-­‐Axis  fields  can  be  entered  three  ways:  

• Manually  enter  literal  text  (Title  fields)  or  field  names  and  calculations  (x-­‐axis  and  y-­‐axis  fields)  

• Click  on  the    icon  to  the  right  of  the  appropriate  field  and  select  'Specify  field  name...'    Choose  or  create  a  field  from  the  Specify  Field.  

• Click  on  the    icon  to  the  right  of  the  appropriate  field  and  select  'Specify  calculation.'    Enter  a  calculation  in  the  Specify  Calculation  window.    

 In  this  example,  it  is  more  efficient  to  add  the  literal  text  "2009-­‐2011  Sales"  to  the  chart's  main  Title  field.    Next,  select  the  desired  chart  from  the  Type  drop  down  menu.    To  create  a  chart  similar  to  Figure  D-­‐1,  select  a  line  chart.        

To  add  values  to  the  x-­‐axis  or  horizontal  axis,  click  the    icon  to  the  right  of  the  Data  field  and  choose  'Specify  field  name...  '    From  the  list  of  fields  that  appear  in  the  

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Specify  field  window,  select  the  Month  field  (Figure  D-­‐5).    Adding  the  Month  field  and  its  values  as  data  points  across  the  x-­‐axis  is  much  more  efficient  than  manually  entering  a  literal  string  of  "January        February      March..."  and  so  on.    Furthermore,  time  spent  aligning  back  and  forth  will  be  saved.    Figure  D-­‐5  

     Now,  the  y-­‐axis  variables  must  be  configured.    Each  field's  values  represent  a  numeric  data  point  for  the  year.    For  example,  in  January  2011  FM  Real  Estate  made  $3,478,928.    In  February  2011,  FM  Real  Estate  garnered  $7,127,928.    The  values  for  each  month  and  year  will  be  a  data  point  on  the  chart.    Ideally,  data  would  be  spread  out  between  years.    Luckily  in  this  configuration,  the  data  is  already  split  between  three  fields.    Each  field  has  its  own  values  and  will  thus  create  a  line  of  comparison  between  each  other.    

Begin  by  clicking  the    icon  to  the  right  of  the  Y-­‐axis  data  field  and  selecting  'Specify  Field  Name.'    From  the  list  of  fields  that  appear,  select  Sales_2011.  The  chart  inspector  should  look  similar  to  Figure  D-­‐6.        Below  the  Y-­‐axis  Data  field,  click  on  the  'Add  a  Y  Series'  button  and  again  choose  'Specify  Field  Name.'    Select  the  Sales_2010  field.    Notice  that  the  Y-­‐axis  section  changes  when  two  or  more  data  series  are  specified  (Figure  D-­‐7).    Click  on  the  plus  or  minus  sign  to  add  or  remove  data  series.    Click  and  drag  a  data  series  up  or  down  to  rearrange  its  position  in  the  graph.  

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 Figure  D-­‐6  

         Figure  D-­‐7  

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   Below  the  Y  data  series  section,  check  the  Show  Legend  checkbox.    The  Legend  is  a  chart  key  used  to  help  you  separate  one  data  series  from  another.      For  our  example  chart,  the  Legend  indicates  which  color,  or  line  in  the  chart,  represents  each  year.    In  the  Axis  options,  change  the  angle  of  chart  labels  along  with  assigning  the  fields  a  data  type.    Click  on  the  Y-­‐axis  tab  in  the  Axis  Options  section.    Verify  that  the  Data  Type  is  Number  and  the  format  is  currency.    Check  the  'thousands  separator'  checkbox  and  select  the  $-­‐1234  option  in  the  Notation  drop  down.    The  labels  on  the  Y-­‐axis  should  now  include  a  currency  format.      The  final  chart  section  should  look  similar  to  Figure  D-­‐8.                        Figure  D-­‐8  

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   Next,  open  the  Styles  section  in  the  chart  inspector  (Figure  D-­‐9).      Most  of  the  aesthetic  configuration  is  listed  here  such  as  color  schemes,  grid  lines,  and  font  modification.    Figure  D-­‐9  

 

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   Open  the  Data  Source  section.    This  section  allows  you  to  choose  where  you  want  FileMaker  to  pull  data.    This  documentation  will  only  cover  current  found  set.    Figure  D-­‐10  

   Click  the  Done  button  and  go  to  Browse  Mode.    The  finished  product  should  look  similar  to  the  following:    Figure  D-­‐11  

   

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 QUICK  CHARTS    Due  to  the  previous  reliance  on  Layout  Mode,  chart  creation  was  only  available  to  database  developers  or  administrators.  Quick  Charts  now  allows  charts  to  be  created  directly  in  Browse  Mode.  This  allows  all  users  the  opportunity  to  create,  print  and  modify  custom  charts.    To  access  the  quick  chart  menu,  ctrl-­‐click  (Mac)  or  right-­‐click  (Windows)  the  desired  fields  on  the  layout.    Or,  in  Table  view,  hover  the  mouse  pointer  to  the  right  of  the  column  name  and  click  on  the  drop  down  menu  arrow.    Figure  E-­‐1  

   Configuration  within  the  quick  chart  setup  window  is  comparable  to  working  within  the  setup  window  that  appears  in  Layout  Mode.    Specific  to  quick  charts,  however,  is  the  ability  to  print.    To  do  so,  click  on  the  Print  Chart  button  in  the  bottom  left  corner  of  the  preview  pane  at  any  point  in  the  chart's  creation.    Because  these  charts  are  created  in  Browse  Mode,  you  have  the  option  to  save  the  chart  as  a  layout.    Subject  to  access  privileges,  clicking  the  Save  as  Layout  button  will  make  the  chart  viewable  as  a  layout  for  future  use.                    

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   Figure  E-­‐2  

     Quick  Chart  Behavior  When  Based  on  Sort  Order    Prior  to  chart  creation,  records  are  often  sorted  as  a  step  toward  graphing  summarized  data  or  charts  where  data  points  represent  groups  of  data  instead  of  individual  records.    For  instance,  a  bar  chart  comparing  second  quarter  sales  between  real  estate  offices  may  result  from  a  subsummary  part  sorting  records  of  sales  transactions  by  each  office  and  a  summary  field  totaling  each  office's  sales  amount.    When  creating  a  quick  chart  based  on  a  sort  order,  it  is  important  to  note  that  if  needed,  FileMaker  creates  a  summary  field  without  prompting  based  on  the  first  sorted  field  and  incorporates  it  into  the  requested  chart.        The  summary  field  exists  in  the  context  of  the  set  up  window  unless  the  chart  is  saved  as  a  layout.    Doing  so  will  add  the  summary  field  to  the  current  table.    If  the  chart  is  cancelled  or  the  window  is  closed,  the  summary  field  will  be  removed.    To  manage  this  field,  toggle  the  Summary  drop  down  menu  in  the  chart  inspector's  Y-­‐axis  data  section  (Figure  E-­‐3  and  E-­‐4).    To  bypass  this  field  to  graph  individual  records,  choose  'None'  from  the  Summary  drop  down  menu  and  select  'Individual  record  data'  from  the  Data  Source  tab  in  the  chart  inspector.      

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       Figure  E-­‐3                                                                                                    Figure  E-­‐4  

                   CHART  EXAMPLES    Scenario  1:  Charting  Summary  Data    In  this  example,  real  estate  agents  want  verify  how  their  clients  discovered  the  company.    For  every  answer,  a  value  is  added  in  the  Discovered_Through  field  indicating  print,  television,  the  Internet,  etc.    Marketing  hopes  to  analyze  this  information  to  help  focus  their  efforts  in  advertising  appropriately.      In  a  choice  between  summarized  data  and  individual  records,  summarized  data  will  best  provide  an  accurate  graph.    The  desired  chart  requires  a  comparison  between  groups  of  similar  information  as  opposed  to  emphasizing  the  differences  of  one  record  to  another.    Grouping  records  can  be  accomplished  through  Table  view's  dynamic  reporting  or  by  manually  created  subsummary  report.    In  this  example,  a  quick  chart  based  on  sort  order  is  used  to  achieve  results.    Figure  F-­‐1  

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   After  sorting  by  the  Discovered_Through  field,  the  quick  chart  menu  is  accessed  by  hovering  the  pointer  to  the  right  of  the  column  name  and  clicking  on  the  drop  down  arrow.    The  option  "Chart  by  Discovered  Through..."  is  selected.    Figure  F-­‐2  

   Although  a  summary  field  specified  to  count  the  number  of  responses  in  each  category  does  not  exist  in  the  current  table,  the  initial  chart  preview  indicates  otherwise.    Data  has  been  divided  into  multiple  categories  that  contain  the  appropriate  number  of  total  responses.    How  is  that  so  if  steps  were  not  made  to  group  and  count  data?      Figure  F-­‐3  

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   When  a  quick  chart  is  created  and  based  on  a  sort  order,  FileMaker  will  determine  if  a  summary  field  based  on  the  first  sorted  field  is  needed.    The  field  exists  in  the  context  of  the  Chart  setup  window  and  is  only  added  to  the  current  Table  when  the  chart  is  saved  as  a  layout.    For  further  details  see  the  section  Quick  Chart  Behavior  When  Based  on  Sort  Order.    For  this  chart,  FileMaker  created  a  summary  field  that  counts  the  number  of  responses  in  each  category.    In  the  Y-­‐axis  section  of  the  chart  inspector  >  chart  tab,  this  newly  created  summary  field  can  be  managed  through  the  Summary  drop  down  menu.    Additional  summary  types  can  be  selected  from  the  list,  though  the  summary  type  'Count'  is  suitable.        Figure  F-­‐4  

   While  the  default  bar  chart  works  for  the  comparison  of  group  response  numbers,  Marketing  was  hoping  to  emphasize  the  comparison  of  response  numbers  per  group  in  relation  to  the  total  amount  of  third  quarter  responses  received.    Switching  the  

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chart  type  from  bar  to  pie  better  demonstrates  Marketing's  goals.    Next,  the  'Show  Legend'  and  'Show  Values  on  Chart'  >  'Percentages'  options  are  enabled  and,  finally,  text  is  added  to  the  Title  field.    Figure  F-­‐5  

     Scenario  2:  Charting  Multiple  Data  Series  from  One  Source  Field    To  produce  accurate  results,  you  may  frequently  find  yourself  in  the  position  of  data  manipulation  through  relationships,  sorting,  calculations,  and  summaries.  Note  the  difference  in  how  data  is  stored  between  Figure  G-­‐1  and  Figure  G-­‐2.    While  both  databases  track  monthly  sales  totals  for  2009  through  2011,  the  required  steps  to  build  a  chart  comparing  monthly  trends  differ  greatly.    In  Figure  G-­‐1,  each  year  is  represented  by  their  own  field:  Sales_2009,  Sales_2010,  and  Sales_2011.    In  the  easier  of  the  two,  each  field  name  would  be  added  as  its  own  data  series  to  complete  the  task.    In  Figure  G-­‐2,  all  of  the  sales  data  is  contained  within  a  single  field,  Sales.  While  other  alternatives  to  achieve  this  goal  exist,  the  example  outlined  in  this  section  will  discuss  how  to  chart  multiple  data  series  from  one  source  field  using  calculations.    Figure  G-­‐1  

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   Figure  G-­‐2  

   To  start,  records  should  be  sorted  (Month_No,  Year)  so  that  January  records  are  followed  by  February  records,  and  so  on.    In  Layout  Mode,  draw  a  chart  in  the  layout's  body  part  using  the  chart  tool  in  the  Status  bar.    Once  the  chart  setup  window  appears,  add  the  month  field  to  the  X-­‐axis  data.    In  the  chart  inspector  >  data  source  section,  summarized  data  will  be  enabled  by  default.    Choose  individual  record  data  so  that  all  of  the  sorted  records  appear  on  the  X-­‐axis  (Figure  G-­‐3).    Figure  G-­‐3  

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In  the  Y-­‐axis  section,  click  on  the    icon  and  add  the  Sales  field.    The  preview  window  should  look  similar  to  Figure  G-­‐4  which  is  the  result  we  want  to  avoid.    The  2009,  2010,  and  2011  data  we  need  to  separate  remain  in  a  single  data  series.      Figure  G-­‐4  

   

Remove  the  Sales  field  from  the  Y-­‐axis  data  section  and  click  on  the    icon  to  the  right.  Select  "Specify  calculation"  and  enter  the  following:    If  (  [database  name]::Year  =  "2011"  ;  [database  name]::Sales  ;  ""  )    We're  telling  FileMaker:  if  the  value  in  the  Year  field  equals  2011,  show  the  value.    Otherwise,  leave  it  blank.    Once  completed,  click  on  the  Add  a  Y  Series  button  and  

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then  the    icon  associated  with  the  new  section.    Add  a  similar  calculation  for  the  year  2010  and  then  repeat  this  process  for  2009  to  create  data  series  specific  to  each  year.    Figures  G-­‐5  shows  a  line  chart  with  2011  data  while  Figure  G-­‐6  shows  a  line  chart  including  2009,  2010,  and  2011  values.    Figure  G-­‐5           Figure  G-­‐6  

             While  the  Y-­‐axis  data  series  have  been  successfully  separated,  the  X-­‐axis  remains  an  issue.    Ideally,  all  three  data  series  would  be  aligned  under  one  month's  name.    However,  keep  in  mind  that  the  chart's  data  source  is  based  off  of  individual  records;  it  is  not  possible  to  have  a  Y-­‐axis  data  point  from  record  1  align  with  the  X-­‐axis  value  from  record  3.    We  can  create  a  calculation  similar  to  the  one  used  to  establish  the  2009,  2010,  and  2011  Y-­‐axis  data  series.    But  instead  of  creating  three  data  series  to  display,  this  calculation  will  only  display  the  values  for  one  year.      

From  the  X-­‐axis  data  section,  click  on  the    icon  to  the  right.    Select  "Specify  calculation..."    and  enter  the  following:    If  (  FM  Real  Estate::Year  =  2010  ;  FM  Real  Estate::Month  ;  ""  )    This  calculation  will  only  show  the  January-­‐December  values  for  2010  though  we  could  use  the  same  calculation  for  2011  or  2009  depending  on  preference.    Again,  while  the  values  are  not  completely  aligned,  this  addresses  the  multiple  values  displayed  on  the  X-­‐axis.    Figure  G-­‐7  

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