More information is required. Are both variables on the X axis on the same frequency scale? If yes then a line graph would be better otherwise, treat both variables on the X axis on different bar charts with their corresponding frequencies. Best regard
Hy Valentine Joseph Owan, thank you for your response.
Please have a look at the enclosed print and look at page 3 and 4.
Page 3 - bar chart - I showed the respondents four casual t-shirts (small product variety) and wanted to know if the will make a purchase. They had to answer accourding to a likert scale. Page 4 - bar chart- I showed the respondents 18 casual t-shirts (small product variety) and wanted to know if the will make a purchase. They had to answer accourding to a likert scale. And now I want to make only one bar chart, where I have the frequencies on the y-axis. And the likert scale on the x-axis, so for instance interviewees with the answer "completely agree" has two bars, one for 4 t-shirts and one for 18 t-shirts, right next the anwser "rather agree" with two bars, one for 4 t-shirts and one for 18 t-shirts, right next the anwser and so on... so all in all only one bar-chart. Is there a possibility to do this. thanks and warm regards, christina
The clustered bar chart should work. I suspect that you are struggling because of how your data are set up. You need one variable for your likert response, and another variable for group/number of t-shirts (18 or 4 t-shirts). You can then show frequency bars for each likert response on the x-axis (which will show labels if you've defined them in your variable), clustered by t-shirt group.
I answered a similar question a little while ago, which may help: https://www.researchgate.net/post/How_do_I_show_the_data_values_on_the_Y-as_of_a_boxplot