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Bar chart

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A bar chart, also known as a bar graph, is a chart with rectangular bars of lengths usually proportional to the magnitudes or frequencies of what they represent. The bars can be horizontally or vertically oriented. Sometimes a stretched graphic is used instead of a solid bar.

Example

The following example chart is based on the results of the election for the European Parliament in 2004 and in 1999. The following table lists the number of seats allocated to each party group. The results of 1999 have been multiplied by 1.16933, to compensate for the change in number of seats between those years.

Group Seats (2004) Seats (1999) scaled
EUL 39 49
PES 200 210
EFA 42 56
EDD 15 19
ELDR 67 60
EPP 276 272
UEN 27 36
Other 66 29

A bar chart visualizing the above results of the 2004 election can look like this:

400px

This bar chart shows both the results of 2004, and those of 1999:

400px

History

The bar chart is possibly the invention of the Scots engineer and economist William Playfair (1759-1823). A bar chart was used in his work The Commercial and Political Atlas (London, 1786).

See also

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

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