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Constructing Tables and Graphics

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Presentation on theme: "Constructing Tables and Graphics"— Presentation transcript:

1 Constructing Tables and Graphics

2 What is the best way to present your data?
Text in a paragraph? Numbers in a table? Or graph/chart in a figure?

3 Converting paragraphs to tables
Data in Paragraphs Converting paragraphs to tables Ch7

4 Tables Rows and columns of data (words or numbers) Ch7

5 Constructing Graphics
Graphs: Represent data using lines that change up and down from left to right. indicating changes in the data across an independent variable (e.g.: time).

6 Graphs Ch7

7 Charts: Use bars, pie slices, or other inventive means to enable comparisons of data. The most common types are bar charts and pie charts.

8 Charts Ch7

9 Charts Bar Charts Ch7

10 Photographs: Supply lots of details (in some cases, too much)
Photographs: Supply lots of details (in some cases, too much). They are useful for example when you want to show a model of a new product.

11 Photographs Ch7

12 Drawings: Simplified illustrations of objects, people, and places, you see plenty of drawings used in instructions. They strip away extraneous (unrelated) detail and focus on the key objects and actions.

13 Drawings Ch7

14 Diagrams: Abstract illustrations of objects
Diagrams: Abstract illustrations of objects. They focus on infrastructure. Diagrams can also be used to illustrate nonphysical things such as concepts. An organizational chart of a company is a typical example. A flowchart of a production process is another.

15 Diagrams Ch7

16 Illustrations Refers to photographs, drawings, diagrams, flowcharts, and schematics. Sources (cite the source): Internet: download or copy and paste. Hardcopy scan: scan the image and import it to your document. Graphic professionals: They can do the drawings for you. You create your drawing using special software such as CorelDraw, AutoCAD, Visio, Adobe Photoshop, …etc.

17 Graphics and Tables Guidelines
When incorporating graphics and tables into an engineering document, pay attention to their standard components, their placement, and cross references to them. The following lists summarizes guidelines stated in this chapter. Add figure and table tittles. Add labels: In illustrations, add words that identify the parts of the thing being illustrated, and a pointer from each label to the part being illustrated. In charts and graphs, add labels to the axes. Ch7

18 Indicate sources of borrowed graphics or tables.
Align and position graphics carefully. Include a legend: if your graphs or charts use different symbols, colors, shadings, or patterns to indicate different elements, include a legend (Figures 7-7 and 7-8). Ch7

19 Legend Ch7

20 Legend Ch7

21 The arrangement of the network (Figure 8.2).
Provide cross reference to your graphics and tables. Use phrasing like the following: As can be seen in Figure 5. The arrangement of the network (Figure 8.2). Averages for the fabric cutting speeds are shown in Table 4 on the next page. Ch7

22 Graphics and Tables Guidelines
Bar Charts Ch7


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