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I believe there is a single word that represents what I am trying to say, but for the life of me I can’t remember it.

I have a line graph of amounts vs. time. The amounts are for different currencies. I then have a derivative graph where all the amounts are in one currency.

The second graph is [blanked] to the same currency.

I thought of normalized, but it doesn't feel quite right. The idea behind this word is to take a disparate dataset and to make it the same.

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  • 1
    Refactored is certainly wrong. I’m not so sure that normalized is necessarily wrong, though. But do you mean converted or scaled?
    – tchrist
    Dec 31, 2012 at 19:42
  • @tchrist - converted is true, but I believe there is a word that is more representative of the action. More along the lines of taking an entire set and making them the same. Normalize is close, but I think there is a better word yet.
    – mrtsherman
    Dec 31, 2012 at 19:48
  • Not sure if I've fully understood but relative? Dec 31, 2012 at 19:53
  • @spiceyokooko - thank you for this suggestion spicey. Not quite what I was looking for. I updated my question with a fill in the blank sentence example. Relative doesn't quite fit the bill - The second graph is relative to the same currency.
    – mrtsherman
    Dec 31, 2012 at 19:58
  • 1
    I'm afraid I too think it's normalized.
    – MetaEd
    Dec 31, 2012 at 20:56

5 Answers 5

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How about exchanged?

Graph 1 represents each series in the local currency.

Graph 2 represents each currency exchanged to [reporting currency here] using the [datasource] rates as of [datestamp].

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  • I ended up ducking my initial question and going with this solution.
    – mrtsherman
    Jan 3, 2013 at 0:02
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Maybe you are thinking of standardized, to bring to a standard measurement.

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  • This has potential. Will see what other suggestions come through.
    – mrtsherman
    Dec 31, 2012 at 20:00
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You used it in your title. I like:

The second graph is consolidated to the same currency.

As with any business artifact, its creation is driven by the intended audience and context. (Is it to the Board of Directors? Is it coming from accountants? Is it to be a standard internal report that has cross-dependent use as a data source? Etc.) That said, simplicity is best. Letting the graph speak for itself. Simply use, “In dollars” as a footnote descriptor to the graph. (Or “Euros” or whatever the audience expects.)

If within a paragraph you need to talk about the graph just say “the consolidated view below.” Where you get into trouble is when you manipulate source data vs. the representation. Then you might include a footer with explicit reference to conversion rate source and date (again depending on proper exactitude of context and use). You probably don’t need to give currency exchange rate source and date, but you do need to make sure the currency values are concurrent, and not – for example – 6 months apart.

“Normalized” is a reserved word in database circles for database design. “Massaged” data is used quite often but not about financial data. (E.g. J. Smith = John Smith, [or does it?]) “Massaged data” intuitively includes rounding errors and such, but it can be pejorative if not careful on a hard report. “Standardized” is rarely used, and can misrepresent – as if all local currencies are inferior to the Euro/Dollar/Yen standard, or whatever. So I would just use “the consolidated view below”. Financial statements talk of “consolidated” funds across global entities.

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I am also a fan of normalized, but here is another option: When one set of data is translated into coordinate system, we sometimes say the data is projected. This is more commonly used when converting from a 3-dimensional system to a 2-dimensional system, such as using a flat map to represent a globe (consider the Mercator Projection)

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In programming, there is a technical term for that, cast. But I don't think that will convey meaning to a non-technical crowd. I was a fan of normalized.

Maybe adjusted? resolved? translated? rendered?

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