https://bugs.documentfoundation.org/show_bug.cgi?id=94872

--- Comment #3 from [email protected] ---
> Question from a developer on IRC: what happens if two bars have the same x
> value?
xy-scatters don't make much sense if two identical x-values are present. If so,
the second one belongs to a different x-axis.

BTW: You should keep in mind that there are many scientific applications for
this. All measurements that produce signals over time could be displayed in the
desired way (since they're not necessarily coherent and thus can't be displayed
by a graph). But it's also conceivable to present economical results (though
not in Gaussian curves, of course). 
And since no other spreadsheet software has this feature, I'd call this as a
greater improvement, maybe worth a higher priority. I think it's about time to
start keeping scientist in mind and stop focussing on economists only. 

There is some software called "chromatogram-simulator.exe", available on the
NIST webpage (http://www.nist.gov/mml/csd/organic/simchromdata.cfm), that does
similar. However, it's only available for Win XP and 7, and you can only enter
10 x-values, and it can't do anything else than simulating the peaks in
different chromatographic environments.

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