Two Charts, One Purpose
When studying Satta Matka results, you'll quickly encounter two primary chart types: the Jodi Chart and the Panel Chart. Both record historical results, but they present different levels of information and serve different analytical purposes. Understanding the distinction between them is important for anyone who wants to study Matka result history effectively.
What Is a Jodi Chart?
A Jodi Chart records only the two-digit Jodi result for each day within a given market. The Jodi, as a reminder, is the two-digit number formed by combining the Open Ank and the Close Ank from a full result.
A Jodi can range from 00 to 99, giving 100 possible values. The Jodi chart displays these values in a simple weekly grid without showing the underlying Panna numbers.
Example Jodi Chart Layout
| Week | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat | Sun |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | 45 | 72 | 13 | 88 | 36 | 51 | 29 |
| Week 2 | 67 | 04 | 93 | 21 | 58 | 40 | 76 |
Each number in the table above is a Jodi — the two-digit combination derived from that day's Open and Close Ank values.
What Is a Panel Chart?
A Panel Chart (also called a Panna Chart) is a more detailed record. It contains the full result for each day, including:
- The Open Panna (three-digit number)
- The Open Ank (single digit)
- The Jodi (two digits)
- The Close Ank (single digit)
- The Close Panna (three-digit number)
Because it contains the full Panna information, the Panel Chart is a more complete record of each result. It is the standard chart used when documenting a market's complete historical data.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Jodi Chart | Panel Chart |
|---|---|---|
| Information shown | Two-digit Jodi only | Full Panna + Ank + Jodi |
| Complexity | Simple | More detailed |
| Best for | Tracking Jodi patterns quickly | Full result analysis |
| Data density | Low (one value per day) | High (five values per day) |
| Panna visible? | No | Yes |
| Used by | Those tracking 2-digit trends | Those studying full result history |
When Should You Use a Jodi Chart?
The Jodi Chart is most useful when you want a quick overview of two-digit result history. Because it is simpler and less visually dense, it is easier to scan across long time periods. Use a Jodi Chart when:
- You want to see how frequently a particular Jodi number has appeared over months or years.
- You are comparing result trends across two different markets at the Jodi level.
- You want a condensed, readable version of a market's history without Panna detail.
When Should You Use a Panel Chart?
The Panel Chart is the better choice when depth matters. Use a Panel Chart when:
- You want to study which specific Panna combinations appeared alongside a particular Jodi.
- You are analysing whether certain Open Pannas correlate with certain Close Pannas.
- You need a complete, accurate record of every result element for a given date range.
- You are learning to understand how Ank values are derived from Pannas.
Can You Use Both Together?
Absolutely. Many Matka chart enthusiasts use both chart types in combination. A common approach is to start with the Jodi Chart to identify periods of interest — perhaps noticing that a particular Jodi appeared frequently during a certain month — and then switch to the Panel Chart to examine the full result context during that same period.
Key Takeaways
- The Jodi Chart is simpler — showing only the two-digit result per day.
- The Panel Chart is more comprehensive — showing Panna, Ank, and Jodi data.
- Both charts cover the same results; the Panel Chart just reveals more of the underlying data.
- Choose based on your analysis goal: quick trend-spotting (Jodi) vs. deep result study (Panel).