are partitioned into bins of equal length and assigned gray-scale colors gs0gs15. There's a (good) reason why you don't see graphs with so many labels or with so many different categories. jects from a Stata dataset (contiguity, idistance, dta), a Mata matrix.
whether or not there is shading, the color of the lines and. One possibility is to restrict which countries you show (as done here and here) or to show all dots but only label a few (as done here and here). Stata for Graphs/stata schemes and palettes.docx. For example, the following command tells Stata to create a scatterplot using length as the x-axis variable and weight and. Note that the last variable you type will be used for the x-axis. Allowing your graph representations to be unique when 100+ countries are shown is a pain, either you do it using labels (as you did in STATA), or using colors (as you did using Excel). You can create a scatterplot with more than two variables by simply typing more variables after the scatter command. This is what we've been trying to tell you. Its virtually impossible to differentiate similar colors in the legend, it is a pain to find specific countries in the graph (where is Ethiopia, Brazil, Serbia?). I find this to be as confusing as the STATA one. I appreciate all the help tho Hi Afonso Rodrigues,
I guess I will need to spend some time doing it in Excel. I have already went throw the "help scatter" function in Stata and I really think it is not possible to do a graph like this in Stata. I can do this in Excel but the only way I know how, would take very long because I need to individually add each country into the graph. As you can see, it's not as confusing as the Stata one, because the labels are all in the bottom of the graph. In this image you can see a graph identical as the one I was building in Excel.