XLSX to Chart

Excel to Chart

Upload an XLSX workbook and chart the selected sheet. UChartX adds sheet selection, header detection, and multi-sheet warnings, then lets you audit and export the result.

  1. 1Upload DataPaste, upload, or load a sample
  2. 2Check & DescribeReview fields and data quality
  3. 3VisualizeChoose and refine the chart
  4. 4Publish & ExportCheck context and download
Chart ready

Loaded sample: Monthly revenue by channel as CSV

Data converter144 rows96/100 score
Browser-side processingNo account requiredUse small, non-sensitive datasets

Steps 1-2

Upload and check data

CSV or pasted tableUse a header row followed by one row per item. Commas, tabs, and copied spreadsheet rows are accepted.Month,Revenue Jan,12400 Feb,13850
Field inspectorOverride a type when the automatic detection is wrong.
144rows
7fields
100%filled
0issues
144 parsed row(s)

Monthly revenue by channel gives Excel to Chart a different data shape for checking recommendations, controls, and exports.

Step 3

Visualize

Preview: Auto

Exports use report 1200x800 with the current title, source note, chart view, and watermark.

Chart viewChoose a view for this preview.

Auto: Use the best default for the current page and detected fields.

uchartx.com

Publish & Export checksTitle readySource note readyAuto preview selected
Month: dateChannel: categoryRegion: categoryRevenue: currencyCost: currencyOrders: numberTarget: number
Input shapeXLSX

small spreadsheet summaries

What this page addssheet selection, header detection, and multi-sheet warnings

Upload an XLSX workbook and chart the selected sheet.

Export decisionChart / PNG / SVG

Avoid this workflow for macros, formulas that need recalculation, or very large workbooks.

Excel to Chart workflow

Excel to Chart is for small spreadsheet summaries. It works with monthly revenue by channel, region, cost, orders, and target, adds sheet selection, header detection, and multi-sheet warnings, and keeps the preview, checks, and exports tied to the data you entered.

From input to export

  1. Start with the revenue sample or paste your own XLSX data.
  2. Load a sample that resembles your data shape.
  3. Review detected fields and recommendations before export.
  4. Export Chart, PNG, SVG after the checks explain any remaining context or readability issues.

When to use

  • Use Excel to Chart when you need to turn small data into a clearer chart.
  • It is a good fit for small spreadsheet summaries.
  • It works best when your data resembles monthly revenue by channel, region, cost, orders, and target.

When not to use

  • Do not use this workflow for macros, formulas that need recalculation, or very large workbooks.
  • Do not publish the result until title, unit, source, and export size have been reviewed.
  • Use another chart preview when the recommendations explain a better fit.

Controls that matter

  • Choose the reader goal before accepting the first chart.
  • Review X and Y field mapping after import.
  • Use sorting or Top N when category labels are long.

Input and method

  • The parser normalizes rows into a browser-side table and never requires an account.
  • Field detection classifies monthly revenue by channel, region, cost, orders, and target into number, date, category, or text fields.
  • The recommendation rules look for date, category, and numeric fields before choosing the first preview chart.
  • The score combines data readiness, field mapping, chart fit, labels, accessibility, and chart export readiness.

Checks before export

  • Using Excel to Chart with data that is better suited to macros, formulas that need recalculation, or very large workbooks.
  • Exporting before adding a clear title, unit, or source note.
  • Ignoring the page limit: this workflow is not intended for macros, formulas that need recalculation, or very large workbooks.
  • Treating the score as approval instead of reviewing the specific fixes.

Export options

  • PNG and SVG exports use the current chart preview and selected size.
  • Markdown and mini report exports include title, source note, detected fields, score, and fixes.
  • HTML, JSON config, clean CSV, and alt text are available from the secondary export panel when data is valid.

Output limits

  • Very large datasets should be summarized before using this browser-side tool.
  • Avoid this workflow for macros, formulas that need recalculation, or very large workbooks.
  • Image-only chart recognition, cloud storage, and collaborative editing are not part of this version.
  • Generated summaries should be reviewed before publication.

FAQ

What data works best with Excel to Chart?

Excel to Chart works best with clean monthly revenue by channel, region, cost, orders, and target that includes headers and enough rows to turn small data into a clearer chart.

What should I check after import?

Confirm headers, field types, row count, and whether nested or copied values were flattened as expected.

Does UChartX upload my data?

Core chart creation runs in the browser. Avoid pasting private or regulated datasets into any web tool.

Can I export from Excel to Chart?

Yes. This page supports the relevant export options listed for the tool: Chart, PNG, SVG.