205 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
205 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1555
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Title: HPR1555: 33 - LibreOffice Calc - Creating Charts
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1555/hpr1555.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 05:03:58
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---
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Hi, this is Ahuka, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode
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in our ongoing series on Libra Office Calc.
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And what we're going to do today, we're going to follow up on our last tutorial or episode
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in whatever, where we talked about how to select the right kind of chart or graph.
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And now we're going to actually get into creating charts and graphs and see how that process
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works and how we can make something nice and clear.
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Now in Libra Office Calc, we can go to the insert menu and select chart to get started.
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Or there's generally a button for it on the standard toolbar.
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It can be a bit hard to make out, but it shows a pie chart in red with a percent sign
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in gray on top of it.
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If you move your cursor over it, the tool tip should say chart.
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Clicking this button opens the chart wizard.
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Now step one is to choose the chart type.
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These are the types we discussed in the previous tutorial, so you should be ready for this
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step.
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But you may notice that for each type, you also have several options.
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There are usually small variations on the main theme of that chart type.
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So for column, you can have a column chart with more than one variable.
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This is usually handled by having multiple columns identified by color for each bucket.
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As an example, suppose you wanted to compare religious preferences in three states.
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You could have a blue bar for Catholics, a red bar for Protestants, a yellow bar for Jews
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and a green bar for Muslims.
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For each state, you would have these four colored coated bars.
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That is your first option.
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Your second option is called stacked.
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In this case, the bars are placed one on top of the other.
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The height of the resulting bar would be different for each state, depending on how many
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people you counted.
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The third option is percent stacked, and in this case, the height of the bars is the
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same.
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It's always 100%, but the height of each section represents its percentage.
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Now for bar graphs, you've got the same options.
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For pie charts, your first option is normal, which is the usual pie chart.
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Second one is exploded, and all that does is separate the slices of the pie.
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It has no added significance and is purely an aesthetic choice.
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The third option, donut, allows you to display two variables on a single pie chart, and
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the fourth option is an exploded donut chart.
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So it combines the exploded feature with multiple variables.
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Area.
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The first option is several data series superimposed one on each other.
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The second option is to stack the data series, and the third is percent stacked.
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This works much the same as with column and bar charts, but is normally done with quantitative
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data.
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Option one is points only, which is kind of an odd choice for a line graph, but maybe
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you might want to do it.
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Option two is to display the points and the line connecting them.
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Option three is to display the line without the points, and then option four turns the
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line into a 3D surface.
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These differences have no significance for the actual data analysis of our purely choices
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of how the graph is to be displayed.
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The odd thing here is that you have options to connect the dots.
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The idea of a scatter plot is that you have no presumption of a relationship that would
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even make sense of connecting the dots, but the options are very similar to what you have
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for line graphs.
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Looking at some of these, and you can tell I'm sort of saying, boy, that sounds kind of
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stupid.
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Why did they do that?
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This is a good example of just because you can do something, doesn't mean you should.
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Some options just don't make a lot of sense most of the time.
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Now for the bubble chart that really only has one variation, makes it nice and simple
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for what they call the net, which I'm calling radar, because that really is a lot more common.
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Option one plots the points on each spoke.
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Option two has both points and the lines connecting them.
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Option three is the lines only.
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And option four fills in each irregular polygon with a color.
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I think option one is not a preferred choice here.
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One of the main virtues of this type of chart is seeing the polygon shape.
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Stock chart.
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Basically the choices here have to do with whether you draw in the columns or just let
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the points exist in space.
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And for column in line, you've got choices of having the columns side by side or stacked.
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So the chart type choice really comes down to a little thought about the clearest way
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to present your data.
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Nothing more deeply significant is really involved.
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Now, data range.
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This is where you need to specify the place where the data comes from.
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The data can be found on a specific sheet for starters.
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Your spreadsheet file can contain multiple sheets or pages within it.
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And if you're not clear on that, please go back and look a few episodes back where we
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talked about that.
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By default, they come labeled sheet one, sheet two, etc. but you can rename them to something
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meaningful.
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Note that when you open this up, it gives the range as being a sheet column row.
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What you need to do is click the button to the right of the data range, which will cause
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the chart wizard to roll up to a single bar.
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And using your cursor, click and drag to take in the whole range.
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And then click that button to the right of the rolled up bar, which will now read expand
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in the tool tip when you cursor over it.
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And this will bring back to your chart wizard with that range of data now filled into the
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data range field.
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You might notice that the addresses are all absolute cell references.
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In other words, they all have dollar signs.
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This is good.
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You don't want your references moving around when you're making a graph.
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The next choice is whether your data series are in columns or rows.
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This is the default, as this is most common, but you can flip it around if desired.
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Why are you being asked this?
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And why does it matter?
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Well, I will illustrate.
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And you're going to have to download and take a look at this to see what I'm talking
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about or check it out on the website, because I'm going to refer to some visuals here.
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But I did first a graph using our simple savings model.
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This is from a few episodes back.
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And if you have that spreadsheet saved, you can open it, select a range from the cell
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that says, year in the upper left, and drag that down into the right for the last cell
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of end amount.
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So you're going to be saving basically all of your data in this big rectangular area.
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And then if you have your data series in columns, you will have four lines on your graph,
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and they all make sense.
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Now, if we put the data series in columns, which is the norm, that's what we get, but suppose
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we put it in rows.
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Well, it would treat each row as its own series.
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The result is kind of weird.
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So you actually, in that case, you have like 40 different series that you're trying to
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do on one graph, and the numbers just don't make any sense at all.
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So now, the other thing in the data range selection, the section here, is to select the
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first row and or first column as being labels.
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Now, when you take a look at the graph, you can see that if you do this properly, this
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makes the graph very readable.
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Since the data series is in columns, each value in the first column becomes a value for
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the x-axis.
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Now, in ours, that was the, you know, which year of the savings period.
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And that makes sense.
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And in each label, in the first row, becomes a different line on the graph with its own
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symbol and legend.
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So you would see, beginning amount is one series, interest earned is another series, annual
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edition is a third series, and ending amount is a fourth series.
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Now, when you take a look at it, you know, annual edition would just be a horizontal straight
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line, of course, because it's just going to be a thousand each year, but the others
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will show an upward trend over time.
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Okay, now we go to data series, and here we can narrow down what we want to show in the
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graph.
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Now, in our savings model, we have four series, right?
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We've got the beginning amount, interest earned, annual edition, and ending amount.
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But we might want to, not want to display all four of those on one graph, suppose we
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only really wanted to show the ending amount on the line graph.
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Then we could select the other columns and click remove.
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If we later changed our minds and wanted to add back a column, for example, interest earned,
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we could come back here and click the add button.
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The other fields that, what Calc is picking up for the series name, it is reading each
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column name from the cell in row one, and it's getting its values for the x-axis.
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Here called categories, though that is more appropriate for bar graphs than for line graphs
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from the values in column A. You can manually change these, or click the button to the right
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of each field and use your mouse to click on what you want.
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Now, chart elements is the next, and on this tab you can add elements to the chart.
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First is a title.
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For our example, let's say it was savings over time.
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When you type this in, it will appear on the top of the chart and be centered.
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Then you can add a subtitle.
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In many cases, you won't want to do this, but the illustrate how it works will add a subtitle,
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a simple model.
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This will appear right under the title, but in a smaller font.
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We can then label each of our axes if that is not clear.
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For the x-axis, we could use years of saving.
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This will appear under the graph in even smaller type.
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For the y-axis, we will use dollars saved.
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This will appear in the same font as the x-axis label, but rotated to match the vertical
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axis.
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Legend matches up a symbol used for the data points to the name of the series.
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In the sample I created, for instance, I have a series of green triangles that represent
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ending them out.
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By default, this is placed on the right of the graph, but you could move it around.
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Finally, the grids create grid lines on the graph.
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If you select x-axis, you will get vertical grid lines, and y-axis gives you horizontal
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grid lines.
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Y-axis is the default, and it usually makes the most sense.
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Once you've made your choices, click finish.
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If you go to my website, you can see the pictures of these graphs, or the final graph is
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included in a revised version of the savings model spreadsheet, which I have put into the
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show notes linked that you can download that and take a look at it, or do your own and
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see if yours looks like what I did on my website.
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So I hope this is helpful.
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I know that when we get to visual stuff like charts and graphs, it could be a little
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hard to do that sometimes in an audio presentation.
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But I'm hoping this is of some use, and at least shows you how you can go through and
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make these kinds of choices, and then if you experiment with it in Libra Office, I
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think you'll get the idea very quickly.
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So this is Hookah, signing off, and reminding you as always, please support FreeSoftware.
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Bye-bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday and Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HBR listener by yourself.
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it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dog Pound and the Infonomicom Computer
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Club.
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by Lina Pages.
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needs.
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share a like, free dose of license.
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