I got this from Billy Mitchell:
Graph #1 |
I threw some trends on Billy's graph, and Jazzbumpa threw them back at me.
I want to do more with trends, using this same graph as a sample. So now I need the numbers. I found this graph at the BLS link Billy provides:
Graph #2 |
BLS provides the data in an Excel file. Pretty nice: It goes back to 1939. Monthly numbers. Funny thing, though: Each year is on its own row, with one column for each month. Just like the Consumer Price Index file I got the other day.
So it was another opportunity to practice my transposing skills, to get all those 12-cell rows turned and moved and properly aligned with all the data in one column so I can more easily use it for graphs and calculations.
I did it this time in Excel, rather than Open Office Calc. I did the same thing as before, inserting columns at the left and doing my work there.
1. In Excel I typed Jan 1939 and when I hit ENTER, it got translated into Jan-39. So Excel recognized it as a date. After I entered the next two months of 1939, I grabbed all three cells and dragged 'em down, and Excel filled in the whole column for me with all the dates I needed.
Perhaps in Open Office if I explicitly formatted the cell as a date, it would have filled in all the dates for me when I tried dragging the group of three cells (see steps 8 and 9 of yesterday's early post).
//
I notice it is much easier to keep track of what I'm doing with this source data, because this time the file does not have the blank line every fifth year.
//
I also noticed the rhythm of the process. First, select a dozen cells and press CTRL-C. Then:
Click a temporary destination and press CTRL-V and then CTRL-X
Click a permanent destination and press CTRL-V and then CTRL-C.
Click a temporary destination and press CTRL-V and then CTRL-X
Click a permanent destination and press CTRL-V and then CTRL-C.
Click a temporary destination and press CTRL-V and then CTRL-X
Click a permanent destination and press CTRL-V and then CTRL-C.
and like that to the end. Except at the end, you don't need the last CTRL-C, because there are no more years to copy.
But it's symmetrical: The CTRL-C that's missing from the end of the sequence appears at the start!
//
Anyway, the whole rearranging-the-data thing took less than half an hour. And that's for all the years since 1939. It goes quick.
//
Spending that much time with the numbers, it occurred to me how unusual it is that the numbers don't keep rising. Economic numbers always go up. But not these numbers.
2 comments:
No, no, no. That was only a list of helpful suggestions. When I throw something back at you, it will go SPLAT!
Cheers!
JzB
BTW, FRED has this data ready to go.
http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/MANEMP/downloaddata?cid=32311
Cheers,
JzB
Post a Comment