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Metastock is such a program, you can find it at http://www.equis.com, cost
around 300$
The graphic you are describing is a candlestick graph. I think it was
invented in japan.
Pierre Roberge
Famic Technologies 2000
> ----------
> De : Chris Kowalchuk[SMTP:chris -at- BDK -dot- NET]
> Répondre à : Chris Kowalchuk
> Date : Monday, April 26, 1999 2:27 PM
> A : TECHWR-L -at- LISTSERV -dot- OKSTATE -dot- EDU
> Objet : Hi-lo graphs--specialized software?
>
> Any financial graph gurus out there?
>
> I sometimes write financial reports or similar material which require
> hi-lo graphs --not the kind you usually see in the financial section of
> the newspaper, but the kind that look like a series of floating
> rectangles, with the top of each rectangle representing your "high" data
> point, and the bottom your "low", and usually with a series of
> horizontal lines within the rectangle representing the median and other
> relevant data points you wish to display within the context of the
> "high" and "low".
>
> In general, what kind of graphing software do people use when they want
> to create fancy graphs of that nature? I've tried Excel, Quatro Pro, MS
> Graph, CorelChart, and Illustrator, and none of them produce the result
> I want very easily (they all require manually adding elements to the
> graph, which then of course don't change when you change your data).
> Anybody out there use Harvard Graphics or Lotus 123, or is there some
> specialist product I've never even heard of? If you think you know what
> I'm talking about (sorry for the lack of clarity, but I don't know the
> terminology to describe what I want), then please get back to me with
> any software tips you may have. I'd like a tool that converts data to
> graph without much invervention on my part.
>
> Chris
>
>
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