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Transcripts for the above video clip:
Pivot Tables 2007- Row Labels
Now let’s look at
the Row Labels part of the Pivot Table.
At the moment you
can see we have pulled through the month and the month is split by
January, February, March and we have some values associated with it.
With the rows you are not limited to only one label, you can have
more than one, so for example I have got something here called Day
of Month – if I click
it and drag it down you will see the little
blue line there – I am going to put it after
the month, when I let go, you’ll see what it does, I
have now got two row labels- one being the month and the second part
of that is the day of the month so you’ll see this is January 25th,
26th etc
and February 1st , 2nd and 3rd.
You can move this around, so, for example, if I take the day of the
month and I rather put it above
the month and let go, now what this is saying is the first days of
the month for February- those were
the answers, for March those were the answers.
For the second day of the month, February March etc.
Let’s just pull it back here. Another thing to notice about
the row labels is that above the row there is a little drop down box
and if I click on it, I
get a number of options. So
you can see there are some sorting options ( I will deal with these
a little bit later), some filter options – so you’ll see if
there were value filters we could do that. And then you’ll see at
the moment we have selected ALL and it is showing
January, February and March. But for example we can easily go
and say I don’t want
January and I don’t want March and when I say OK you’ll see
those disappear- so we
can be quite specific on what we want to show. I will just switch
those back on and say OK. You’ll see each row label will have a drop
down and depending what’s in them certain other options will
become available.
As with all things
Excel if you right click on one of these row labels you will see you
have a number of options. If I click on “Field Settings”
you’ll see we get this – you can see at the moment Excel has
automatically chosen a label for the row and called it Month but you
can change it. Another useful thing to see is you have got something
here called Sub-Total and you can
see it is set it
at Automatic. What that means is that it has automatically decided
it will take these numbers and in this case sum them. You can change
or decide what you want to see here. So if I click “None” and I
say OK watch what happens – you’ll see
the sub-total disappears.
If you right click here and go to Field
Settings – there is also something called “Custom” so if I
click on it I can now say please sum the items or count them. If I
click on Count and say OK you’ll see now it is not summing these
items but counting how many items exist here. If I went to this row
label and I right clicked and I said Field Settings you will have a
different set of Field settings because
each row label has its own field settings
so I’m going to go back here and right click. If
I am on Count and I switch Sum on, they both stay highlighted and
you put Average on as well as well as Max and Min.
When I say ok you get all these details relating to those
items – the sum of the items, the count of them, the average, the
maximum number and the minimum number.
Go back to Automatic
option. Right click on the Row Labels again
- go to Field Settings. Look at Layout and Print. At the
moment it is ticked as “show item labels in tabular form” – if
I said please show the items labels in
“outline form” and
say OK you will see how the Pivot Table looks changes. Go back to
Layout and Print and say “please
display labels from the next field in the same column” –
something called Compact Form - OK - you’ll see basically the
columns now are a lot closer together.
Right click and Field settings – “please display the
sub-totals at the top of each group” – at the moment the
sub-totals are at the bottom – OK – you’ll see they switch to
the top. Back to Field Settings, Layout and Print – Let’s
go back to show items in tabular form. You’ll see you can also set
it up so it inserts a blank line after
each item label. When I switch it on and say OK you’ll see
it creates a blank line between each individual item. Right
click Field Settings – you can also specify to show items with no
data. By default, in the Pivot Table, if there is no data for a
particular item it will not show that item. You can actually insist
that it does show the item. You can ask it to insert a Page break
after each item – so if you did this and printed it out, this
section would be printed, there would be a page break here and this
section would be printed on a new page.
Let’s see what
else you can do with the Row Labels. If I right click you’ll see
one of the options is SORT. You will see there are a couple of
options – sort A-Z, Z-A or more sort options. As mentioned
earlier, pivot tables are their own animal and they basically live
outside of the spreadsheet – they sit on top of the spreadsheet.
What that means is that if I come for eg to February – if I go and
change the cursor to that little four directional arrow – if I
click, hold and I move it up – notice that little dashed line –
what this means is that I am going to manually sort this so I want
February to appear above January – when I take it to the top and I
let go every item that belongs to February moves up with it. So that
is manual sorting. And I
can do the same thing, click, change the cursor move it to the top.
Let’s say I decide, for whatever reason,
the Day 5 should
not exist before or
after Day 1, click, move it to the top
and now you’ll see my sort order is
5 1 2 3 4 and
notice that for all the months that sort order has been applied.
That is manual sorting.
However when I right
click and I say sort -and I say sort A-Z and click on it , you’ll
see it sorts it in ascending order- Jan, Feb March. If I right click
again and say sort Z-A, you’ll see it goes backwards. Probably
more interesting is if I go to Sort and then choose More Sort
Options- what you’ll
see is we get this : we can switch back to go manual (drag and
drop), we can go ascending or descending but very important you will
see at the moment it is showing ascending by month- what that means
that it will sort it in ascending
but will use the month’s row label to decide what the order
is. We don’t have to use that. If I click here I can say “please
use the Sum of
Bill rather”. Go from the lowest to the highest based
on the Sum of Bill. If I
look here and say OK – you’ll see January is in the front
because it has the lowest sum of bill (184) next is March
(915) and last is February(1138).
Perhaps you want to do it at this level, I come here, I right
click, sort – because
it has recognized it is a number
it now says sort from smallest
to largest or largest to
smallest – I can say
more sort options – in this case let’s go descending –
not by day of month now – I don’t want to see 31, 30, 28 – I
want to base it on the count. So
show me the highest count here. Click OK.
It has now sorted
these items, based on the count.
You may also notice
that in the row labels you’ll see next to these items there is a
little minus sign. If in this case I do not want to see the detail ,
I can click and it is all closed and I have got my
totals. If I now want to see the detail,
click and it is all shown. If you right click on one of these
you’ll see something called
Expand and Collapse – I can either expand or collapse
individually or let us
collapse the entire field. You’ll
see all of those close and you’ll now just see January and March
and February. If I want to expand say “Expand entire field” and
you’ll see that is brought through
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