Hourly Goals Chart with Conditional Formatting

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A while back I developed a solution to a Chandoo.org Forum question, where the user wanted a 4 level doughnut chart where each doughnut was made up of 12 segments and each segment was to be colored based on a value within a range.

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You can read the original post here: http://forum.chandoo.org/threads/hourly-goals-chart.30621/

This post will examine the techniques I used for the solution.

Data

Download the sample file: Download Hourly Goals Chart File

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The first thing to note is that there are 4 column of data, one for each measure of Safety, Quality, Delivery and Cost.

Secondly is that each measurement has 12 values representing the times from 4:30 am to 3:30 pm.

We need to setup a Doughnut Chart with 4 layers of 12 segments each

The easiest way to do this is to replicate the data area, but fill it with the same value in all cells,

I choose 1, but as long as all values are the same value, it can be any value

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Add a Doughnut Chart

Select the Range A16:E28

Goto the Insert, Chart and select the Pie/Doughnut menu

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We have a bit of work to do yet to get the charts format correct

First select the chart then select the Chart’s Legend and press Delete

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Next with the chart still selected, Right Click on any Doughnut and select Format Data Series

Set the Doughnut Hole Size to 25%

Do not change the angle of the first slice

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Right  click on the Outer Doughnut and select Add Data Labels, Data Labels

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Right Click on any Data Label and Select Format Data Labels

Tick Value From Cells, Select a range A17:A28

Untick Value

Untick Leader Lines

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Now manually click and drag each data label outwards to its final location

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Finally set the Border Color for the doughnuts

Right Click on each Doughnut in turn

Set the Doughnut’s Border Line to a Grey Color and a 2 Pt line size

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We can now add a text box for the Doughnut Labels

With the chart selected, goto the Insert, Text Box menu

Drag a Text Box inside the chart

Right click on the Text Box and edit Text and type in the value Cost

Now repeat this for the other 3 Doughnuts

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Connect the Doughnut Segments to the Data Area

We now have a basic Doughnut chart with all the facilities we require.

Unfortunately, Excel doesn’t have a built-in Conditional Formatting option for charts.

So we will need to develop a system using some simple VBA.

Understand the Doughnut Chart

To write a piece of code we will need to loop through each segment of each doughnut and reference it back to the source data area

Then use some code to set the fill color

then repeat for each segment

 

To do this we need to understand which doughnut is which column of data and which segment in the doughnut is which time period

First select the inner Doughnut, Note that when you select it, Excel highlights the Safety Series as well as showing the Series Number in the Formula Bar

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Repeat with the outer Series and you will see that Doughnut 4 is connected to the Cost Data and is series 4.

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To determine which segment is which goto cell E17 and change the value from 1 to 2

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So we understand that the series go from Value 1 to 4, Inner to Outer Doughnuts and that the segments go from value 1 to 12 clockwise, starting to the right of 12 O’Clock.

Finally select the Chart and make note of it’s name.

The Charts Name is shown in the Name Dialog above cell A1

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Now for some VBA

Lets start by first manually recording a macro in VBA and we will then edit and add to the macro to get our final result

Start the macro Recorder by Pressing the Macro Button in the lower left corner of the Excel Window

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Note the Macro Name, which is most likely Macro1 and press Ok

Now everything that you do is being recorded by the Visual Basic Editor (VBE)

Select the Outer Doughnut, then select Segment one, then Right Click on Segment one, Format Data Point

Select the Fill & Line menu

Set the Fill to a Solid Fill and Select a Color Red

You can now stop macro recording by pressing the Macro button again

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Lets look at our code

To change to VBA press the Alt+F11 button

You should have a screen similar to this:

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Take note of the above.

We can see that we have a Macro1 subroutine, located in Module 1 of our Excel file.

If you can’t see a Properties or Immediate window, don’t worry.

Looking at the VBA Code we can see

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  1. That the chart is called Chart 1
  2. We selected Doughnut 4, the outer doughnut
  3. We selected the first segment in Doughnut 4
  4. We set the Fill Color of Segment 1 to Red  = RGB(255, 0, 0)

So this little bit of code will form the basis of our macro

What we need to do next is to place that within 2 loops, one loop for the Doughnut and one loop for the Segment

So lets do that:

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You can see above that we have initialised two variables Doughnut and Segment as Integers

We have setup two loops, one for the Doughnut which will loop from 1 to 4 and a second loop for the Segment, which will loop from 1 to 12.

We can now use these variables within the code to reference each Doughnut / Segment as relevent

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The next thing is to add lines to lookup the value of the measure in the original data table.

We can use our variables to assist us with this:

I have added a new variable declaration myVal and declared it an Integer as it is only storing the values from, 0 to 3.

Then we retrieve the value from the data area by using a Range(“”).Offset(Row,Column) combination.

We know that the segment loops from 1 to 12 and this is the Row Offset in each Doughnut.

The Doughnut loops from 1 to 4 and this is the Column Offset from the cell A1

 

 

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Next we need to allow for each fill color remembering that the data area has a legend

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We could loop from a value of 0 to 3 and check the new variable myVal against each value and set the color.

But VBA has a Select Case function which is ideally suited to this task

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A also took the opportunity to streamline the Chart selection process in the previous step

That allowed the use of the With Object construct, allowing the Select case to use the myVal to apply different colors to the fill property of each segment

 

At this stage we can run the code, by simply pressing F5 in VBA

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We can change the code to allow it to update automatically when Data range changes

To do this we need to shift the code to a Sheet1 Code Module associated with Worksheet Sheet 1

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Note above that the code is now located in a Private Sub Worksheet_Change event. This means that the code runs whenever worksheet1 chnages.

The next line If Intersect(ActiveCell, Range(“B2:E13”)) Is Nothing Or Target.Count > 1 Then Exit Sub

Checks whether the cell that changed was not part of our Data Area or that multiple cells were selected.

If either are are true the macro ends

Then finally I removed the MyVal calculation and made it part of the Select Case function.

because we aren’t using myVal I removed the Dim myVal statement

We can now also remove Module 1, right click on it and Remove Module.

Save the file and return to Excel with Alt+F11

You can now change any cells in the data area and the macro updates the chart accordingly

Can we tidy up the layout of the worksheet?

Although we now have a fully functional model, we are stuck with an ugly worksheet layout because our template of 1’s is being used to support the framework of the 4 Doughnuts in the chart.

What if there was another way to achieve that?

Well there is.

Firstly, we could simply shift the range A18:ER30 well away from the Chart and data area or even move it to another worksheet.

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This will work, but risks a person adding data, rows or columns and messing up the layout

But there is a better way

I am going to add 4 Named Formula to the worksheet, one for each Doughnut

Goto the Formula, Name Manager Tab and add 4 Names as listed below:

_Safety      =1+(ROW(OFFSET(Sheet1!$A$1,,,12,1))-1)*0

_Cost        =_Safety

_Delivery  =_Safety

_Quality  =_Safety

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The 4 Names now contain an array of 12 x 1 each with a value 1.

We can use that to link the Doughnuts to instead of the Physical Range

Right click on the chart and Select Data

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Select each Doughnut in term and Edit

Change the Series Name to Row 1 and insert the Names into the Series values dialog.

Note that the formula must include the Worksheet name =Sheet1!_Safety etc

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Repeat this for the 4 Series

You can now select the framework range: A18:E30 and press Delete

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The chart remains intact and is now supported by the Named Formula

Change some values in the Data range at the top and the Chart updates as it should.

You can download the final version of the file here: Download Completed File

Final Thoughts

The technique applied to the doughnut chart above can fairly easily be modified to any chart type or in fact any other shapes.

Let me know what you think in the comments below:

ps: This has been one of my hardest posts to write, simply because Microsoft has misspelt Doughnut. In my native Australian English it is Donut.

 

 

 

 

 

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26 Responses to “FIFA Worldcup Excel Spreadsheets [Roundup]”

  1. J. J. says:

    Nice roundup! Do you know of any one-page spreadsheets which will be updated by an administrator after each game? Would be nice to be able to print out the latest results whenever I feel like checking them as I probably won't be following closely every day.

    I actually haven't tried any of the above ones yet, but I thought I'd mention this one that I found which makes a nice one-page form you can fill in dynamically. http://exceltemplate.net/sports/world-cup-2010-schedule-and-scoresheet/

  2. Diego Garcia says:

    I would like to recommend you these one: http://www.anotagol.com/
    You can choose your interface language (english, spanish, italian, portuguese, german or french) and your country for the timezone of match. I like it very much.

  3. [...] Passend zu gerade laufenden Fußball-WM gibt es auf Chandoo.org alles wissenswerte über Excel-Anwendungen für den Fußball-Fan. [...]

  4. Rohit1409 says:

    Great!!!

    I strongly recommend this :

    http://www.en.excel-soccer-2010.de/downloads

    Chandoo how you found this ...

  5. Chandoo says:

    @Rohit.. really beautiful file. I missed it during my research. Now, I recommend it. 🙂

  6. Mourad Louha says:

    Hi Chandoo - thanks for the recommandation 🙂 - Regards

  7. [...] Excel, then print it on the other side of your Match Schedule from step 2 above. There are several other Excel spreadsheet templates you can download, but this is probably the only one-page version you can find; plus, it [...]

  8. Robert says:

    Does anybody know how to re-create this(?): http://www.marca.com/deporte/futbol/mundial/sudafrica-2010/calendario-english.html
    ...or do you know where a template can be found? I am DYING to have something like this on my site. When I found it, I had been looking for the longest time for a circular calendar. I found a couple that weren't adequate. Then I stumbled upon this one and my eyes nearly popped out of my head. If anyone can lead me in the right direction, I would be eternally grateful!

    Thanks in advance!
    Robert

  9. Chandoo says:

    @Robert...

    Doing something like that is a lot of work. You can probably get it done with some hired help from a flash developer.

  10. Pedro Wave says:

    @Robert, the World Cup flash in the Spanish Marca newspaper is impresive, but not much as my own animated spreadsheet with the Goals of 2010 World Cup South Africa in Excel that I just published into my blog:
    http://pedrowave.blogspot.com/2010/06/goals-of-2010-world-cup-south-africa-in.html

    Download from here:
    http://cid-6b219f16da7128e3.office.live.com/view.aspx/.Public/Goals%20South%20Africa%20Animated.xlsx

    And start to enter the goals of the rest of matches.

  11. Neil says:

    Has anyone seen, or made, a Spreadsheet where you can record the scorers and see a 'top scorers' chart. Would be a nice enhancement

  12. Chandoo says:

    @Neil... checkout this one http://www.inflexionary.com/sports/world-cup-2010-excel

    it uses macros to fetch scores from web (and provides very comprehensive analysis too)

    @All.. Thanks for the comments. I have updated the post with few more links now.

  13. Sergio Mathias says:

    Hi,
    Check this dashboards too:
    http://dashboards.org/world-cup-dashboards-and-visualizations/
    😉

  14. [...] Here is a collection of FIFA World Cup Spreadsheets if you are more in to that sort of thing. | [...]

  15. [...] Cup fever is here!In FIFA Worldcup Excel Spreadsheets Roundup, Chandoo has some links to useful World Cup tracking workbooks. Only one of them (the first one) [...]

  16. [...] World Cup fever is here!In FIFA Worldcup Excel Spreadsheets Roundup, Chandoo has some links to useful World Cup tracking workbooks. Only one of them (the first one) [...]

  17. Hey, you missed ours! It has everything you need and more, but not a whole pile of silly extras (National Anthems, etc).  I'll be making another one for the 2014 world cup.  We had over 4000 hits on it!

  18. Neil says:

    @Michael Harwood.

    Where is it then? You should have posted a link  

  19. phillip says:

    Sie sollten an einem Wettbewerb teil zu nehmen für einen der besten Blogs im Web. Ich werde empfehlen Sie diese Seite!
    Google translation: You should take part in a contest for one of the best blogs on the web. I will recommend this site!

  20. [...] and welcome to the forum, Maybe these similar spreadsheets might give you a few initial ideas: FIFA Worldcup Excel Spreadsheets [Roundup] | Chandoo.org - Learn Microsoft Excel Online If you have specific areas / formulae / layout choices for parts of your spreadsheet that you are [...]

  21. Petros says:

    Calling all football fans around the globe! The biggest football festival will kick off on the 12th June 2014 and everyone is placing their bets of who will have the honour of lifting the golden trophy.

    Use our free interactive Excel templatel to predict the World cup finalists ! No macros !

    http://www.spreadsheet1.com/world-cup-2014-free-excel-prediction-template.html

  22. marten says:

    I also made a Worldcup-tracker, with MS Access, which can also generate reports in Excel
    e.g. a match-schedule with locations on y-axis and dates on x-axis, see:
    http://worktimesheet2014.blogspot.com.es/2014/05/excel-with-match-schedule-for-2014-fifa.html
    and:
    http://worktimesheet2014.blogspot.com.es/2014/05/match-access-app-to-track-world-cup.html

  23. Vivek Ranjan says:

    where can i find raw data in excel file format of fifa world cups (1930-2014)

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