Lesson 5.1 – Basic Charts Charts are one of the most effective ways to visualize data in Excel. They help you understand trends, compare values, and communicate information clearly. In this lesson, you will learn how to create the three most common chart types used worldwide: column charts, line charts, and pie charts. 1. Why Charts Matter Charts transform raw numbers into visual insights. They make it easier to: Identify patterns and trends Compare categories or time periods Highlight important values Present data in a professional way Charts are essential in business reports, presentations, dashboards, and data analysis. 2. How to Create a Chart Steps: Select the data you want to visualize (including headers). Go to Insert on the Ribbon. Choose the chart type you want to create. Excel will generate the chart automatically and place it on your worksheet. 3. Column Charts Column charts are used to compare values...
Chapter 8: Set Operations Merge query results seamlessly: UNION vs. UNION ALL, INTERSECT, EXCEPT (or MINUS). Perform sophisticated multi-query analyses with ease. Combining multiple query outputs into a single, coherent result set is a cornerstone of advanced SQL analysis. SQL’s set operations— UNION , UNION ALL , INTERSECT , and EXCEPT (also known as MINUS in some systems)—allow you to treat query results like mathematical sets. Whether you need to deduplicate rows, find overlaps, or subtract one dataset from another, set operations streamline multi-query workflows. This detailed guide covers each operator’s syntax, performance considerations, real-world use cases, and best practices. 1. The Basics of Set Operations Before diving into each command, ensure your subqueries: Return the same number of columns Use compatible data types in each column position List columns in the same order SQL set operations follow these set-theory rules: UNION : combine two result sets and remov...