ControlCollection.AddChart Method (Double, Double, Double, Double, String) (2007 System)
Adds a new Chart control to the worksheet in the specified size and location.
Namespace: Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel
Assembly: Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.v9.0 (in Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.v9.0.dll)
Syntax
'Declaration
Public Function AddChart ( _
left As Double, _
top As Double, _
width As Double, _
height As Double, _
name As String _
) As Chart
'Usage
Dim instance As ControlCollection
Dim left As Double
Dim top As Double
Dim width As Double
Dim height As Double
Dim name As String
Dim returnValue As Chart
returnValue = instance.AddChart(left, _
top, width, height, name)
public Chart AddChart(
double left,
double top,
double width,
double height,
string name
)
public:
Chart^ AddChart(
double left,
double top,
double width,
double height,
String^ name
)
public function AddChart(
left : double,
top : double,
width : double,
height : double,
name : String
) : Chart
Parameters
left
Type: System.DoubleThe distance in points between the left edge of the control and the left edge of the worksheet.
top
Type: System.DoubleThe distance in points between the top edge of the control and the top edge of the worksheet.
width
Type: System.DoubleThe width of the control in points.
height
Type: System.DoubleThe height of the control in points.
name
Type: System.StringThe name of the control.
Return Value
Type: Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.Chart
The Chart control that was added to the ControlCollection instance.
Exceptions
Exception | Condition |
---|---|
ArgumentNullException | The name argument is nulla null reference (Nothing in Visual Basic) or has zero length. |
ControlNameAlreadyExistsException | A control with the same name is already in the ControlCollection instance. |
Remarks
The AddChart method enables you to add Chart controls to the end of the ControlCollection. To remove a Chart control that was previously added programmatically, use the Remove method.
Examples
The following code example inserts the number 16 to cells E1 through E3 and the number 24 to cells F1 through F3. The code then creates a Chart control to the top of the worksheet and passes cells E1 through F3 to the SetSourceData method to populate the chart with data.
Private Sub ExcelAddChart()
Me.Range("E1", "E3").Value2 = 16
Me.Range("F1", "F3").Value2 = 24
Dim Chart1 As Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel. _
Chart = Me.Controls.AddChart(0, 0, 130, _
130, "Chart1")
Chart1.SetSourceData(Me.Range("E1", "F3"), _
Excel.XlRowCol.xlColumns)
Chart1.ChartType = Excel.XlChartType. _
xlColumnClustered
End Sub
private void ExcelAddChart()
{
this.Range["E1", "E3"].Value2 = 16;
this.Range["F1", "F3"].Value2 = 24;
Microsoft.Office.Tools.Excel.Chart chart1 =
this.Controls.AddChart(0, 0, 130, 130, "chart1");
chart1.SetSourceData(this.Range["E1", "F3"], Excel.XlRowCol.xlColumns);
chart1.ChartType = Excel.XlChartType.xlColumnClustered;
}
.NET Framework Security
- Full trust for the immediate caller. This member cannot be used by partially trusted code. For more information, see Using Libraries from Partially Trusted Code.