openpyxl.chart.error_bar.
ErrorBars
(
errDir=None
,
errBarType='both'
,
errValType='fixedVal'
,
noEndCap=None
,
plus=None
,
minus=None
,
val=None
,
spPr=None
,
extLst=None
)
[source]
¶
direction
¶
Aliases can be used when either the desired attribute name is not allowed or confusing in Python (eg. “type”) or a more descriptve name is desired (eg. “underline” for “u”)
errBarType
¶
Value must be one of {‘both’, ‘minus’, ‘plus’}
errDir
¶
Value must be one of {‘y’, ‘x’}
errValType
¶
Value must be one of {‘percentage’, ‘stdErr’, ‘stdDev’, ‘fixedVal’, ‘cust’}
extLst
¶
Values must be of type <class ‘openpyxl.descriptors.excel.ExtensionList’>
graphicalProperties
¶
Aliases can be used when either the desired attribute name is not allowed or confusing in Python (eg. “type”) or a more descriptve name is desired (eg. “underline” for “u”)
minus
¶
Values must be of type <class ‘openpyxl.chart.data_source.NumDataSource’>
noEndCap
¶
Values must be of type <class ‘bool’>
plus
¶
Values must be of type <class ‘openpyxl.chart.data_source.NumDataSource’>
size
¶
Aliases can be used when either the desired attribute name is not allowed or confusing in Python (eg. “type”) or a more descriptve name is desired (eg. “underline” for “u”)
spPr
¶
Values must be of type <class ‘openpyxl.chart.shapes.GraphicalProperties’>
style
¶
Aliases can be used when either the desired attribute name is not allowed or confusing in Python (eg. “type”) or a more descriptve name is desired (eg. “underline” for “u”)
tagname
= 'errBars'
¶
val
¶
Values must be of type <class ‘float’>