I am looking for a way to do a year-over-year line chart for comparing values at the same time frame (day/week/month) compared to the previous year. When looking for examples I am seeing a lot of line charts with an x-axis with values looking like "MM YYYY". What I am trying to do is to create a chart with an x-axis with values looking like "MM" and then different colored lines representing those values at a different year. Below is an example from Tableau...I am wondering if I can create something like this in Quicksight

Poverty guidelines since 1982 for the 48 contiguous states and the District of Columbia can be calculated by addition using the figures shown below. (This simple calculation procedure gives correct guideline figures for each year, but it is not identical to the procedure by which the poverty guidelines are calculated from the poverty thresholds each year; see an example calculation.) Before 1982, the poverty guidelines were issued by the Office of Economic Opportunity/Community Services Administration.


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Over the course of the last 230 years, women have played a major role in the United States Coast Guard and its predecessor services. Coast Guard women have helped shape the service and pioneered the role of their gender in the federal government and the nation as a whole.

The deadline to apply to the Academy for the Class of 1976 was December 15, 1975, and 700 women submitted admission applications out of 10,000 applicants. On June 28, 1976, the class of 1980 swabs reported to the Coast Guard Academy, including 38 women. It was the first time that a U.S. military service had appointed women to its academy. Of the original 38 female cadets in the entering class of 1980, 14 graduated. Three years later, the service counted 129 female officers, many of them Academy graduates, with 35 serving afloat and five serving as aviators.

Women have walked the long blue line since the very beginning of the Service. They have helped shape the U.S. Coast Guard into a better institution for all who serve and they will play an even greater role in shaping the service in the 21st century.


I need help to understand if there is a way to display year-over-year data in a line chart. For my particular example, I am plotting vehicle rentals over time. I want to plot the date the rental occurs on the x-axis and the count of total rentals for that day on the y-axis. The tricky part is that I want to show the data with a year-over-year comparison and that is where I need help.

I am aware of the Color field for Line Charts that allows grouping different lines over one another by different dimensions. However, I cannot do this because I am already using the date field along the x-axis...QuickSight tells me "You can't use the same field for more than one dimension (blue) field well. Choose different fields for them"

Essentially what I want is for the x-axis to show all the months (or days) from January to December. Then Each different color line will represent the count of rentals for each year. Ideally, this would be drillable too, so a user could drill down to the week or day view but preserve the year-over-year view. Here is an image that I've created demonstrating this: YoY Line Chart

you could potentially use the periodOverPeriodLastValue to create a calculated field for PreviousYear for the specific measure, or more than one calculated field if you want to compare more years, and play with the offset.

using your method, instead of splitting all part of the years, you could just create a calculated field that maps the same day and month to an non existent year in your data set ( i.e. calculated field parseDate(concat('1900-',substring(toString(Date),6,5)),'yyyy-MM-dd') ) .In this way you have stiil a date format and you can use the visual custom fromat for the date to show MMM-dd i.e. Jan 01.

Line graphs are used to track changes over short and long periods of time. When smaller changes exist, line graphs are better to use than bar graphs. Line graphs can also be used to compare changes over the same period of time for more than one group.

Area graphs are very similar to line graphs. They can be used to track changes over time for one or more groups. Area graphs are good to use when you are tracking the changes in two or more related groups that make up one whole category (for example public and private groups).

To calculate depreciation using a straight line basis, simply divide net price (purchase price less the salvage price) by the number of useful years of life the asset has."}},{"@type": "Question","name": "When Should One Use Straight Line Deprecation?","acceptedAnswer": {"@type": "Answer","text": "Straight line is the most straightforward and easiest method for calculating depreciation. It is most useful when an asset's value decreases steadily over time at around the same rate."}},{"@type": "Question","name": "What Are Realistic Assumptions in the Straight-Line Method of Depreciation?","acceptedAnswer": {"@type": "Answer","text": "While the purchase price of an asset is known, one must make assumptions regarding the salvage value and useful life. These numbers can be arrived at in several ways, but getting them wrong could be costly. Also, a straight line basis assumes that an asset's value declines at a steady and unchanging rate. This may not be true for all assets, in which case a different method should be used."}},{"@type": "Question","name": "What Is Straight Line Amortization?","acceptedAnswer": {"@type": "Answer","text": "Straight line amortization works just like its depreciation counterpart, but instead of having the value of a physical asset decline, amortization deals with intangible assets such as intellectual property or financial assets."}}]}]}] Investing Stocks  Bonds  ETFs  Options and Derivatives  Commodities  Trading  FinTech and Automated Investing  Brokers  Fundamental Analysis  Technical Analysis  Markets  View All  Simulator Login / Portfolio  Trade  Research  My Games  Leaderboard  Banking Savings Accounts  Certificates of Deposit (CDs)  Money Market Accounts  Checking Accounts  View All  Personal Finance Budgeting and Saving  Personal Loans  Insurance  Mortgages  Credit and Debt  Student Loans  Taxes  Credit Cards  Financial Literacy  Retirement  View All  News Markets  Companies  Earnings  CD Rates  Mortgage Rates  Economy  Government  Crypto  ETFs  Personal Finance  View All  Reviews Best Online Brokers  Best Savings Rates  Best CD Rates  Best Life Insurance  Best Personal Loans  Best Mortgage Rates  Best Money Market Accounts  Best Auto Loan Rates  Best Credit Repair Companies  Best Credit Cards  View All  Academy Investing for Beginners  Trading for Beginners  Become a Day Trader  Technical Analysis  All Investing Courses  All Trading Courses  View All TradeSearchSearchPlease fill out this field.SearchSearchPlease fill out this field.InvestingInvesting Stocks  Bonds  ETFs  Options and Derivatives  Commodities  Trading  FinTech and Automated Investing  Brokers  Fundamental Analysis  Technical Analysis  Markets  View All SimulatorSimulator Login / Portfolio  Trade  Research  My Games  Leaderboard BankingBanking Savings Accounts  Certificates of Deposit (CDs)  Money Market Accounts  Checking Accounts  View All Personal FinancePersonal Finance Budgeting and Saving  Personal Loans  Insurance  Mortgages  Credit and Debt  Student Loans  Taxes  Credit Cards  Financial Literacy  Retirement  View All NewsNews Markets  Companies  Earnings  CD Rates  Mortgage Rates  Economy  Government  Crypto  ETFs  Personal Finance  View All ReviewsReviews Best Online Brokers  Best Savings Rates  Best CD Rates  Best Life Insurance  Best Personal Loans  Best Mortgage Rates  Best Money Market Accounts  Best Auto Loan Rates  Best Credit Repair Companies  Best Credit Cards  View All AcademyAcademy Investing for Beginners  Trading for Beginners  Become a Day Trader  Technical Analysis  All Investing Courses  All Trading Courses  View All EconomyEconomy Government and Policy  Monetary Policy  Fiscal Policy  Economics  View All  Financial Terms  Newsletter  About Us Follow Us      Table of ContentsExpandTable of ContentsWhat Is Straight Line Basis?Formula and Calculation of Straight Line BasisHow It WorksPros and ConsExample of Straight Line BasisStraight Line Basis FAQsThe Bottom LineCorporate FinanceAccountingStraight Line Basis Calculation Explained, With ExampleBy

While the purchase price of an asset is known, one must make assumptions regarding the salvage value and useful life. These numbers can be arrived at in several ways, but getting them wrong could be costly. Also, a straight line basis assumes that an asset's value declines at a steady and unchanging rate. This may not be true for all assets, in which case a different method should be used.

Straight line amortization works just like its depreciation counterpart, but instead of having the value of a physical asset decline, amortization deals with intangible assets such as intellectual property or financial assets.

On December 1, 1913, Henry Ford installs the first moving assembly line for the mass production of an entire automobile. His innovation reduced the time it took to build a car from more than 12 hours to one hour and 33 minutes. 006ab0faaa

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