About 400 results
Open links in new tab
  1. Add a pie chart - Microsoft Support

    Select Insert > Chart > Pie and then pick the pie chart you want to add to your slide. In the spreadsheet that appears, replace the placeholder data with your own information.

  2. Explode or expand a pie chart - Microsoft Support

    To make parts of a pie chart stand out without changing the underlying data, you can pull out an individual slice, pull the whole pie apart, or enlarge or stack whole sections by using a pie or …

  3. Select data for a chart - Microsoft Support

    Learn best ways to select a range of data to create a chart, and how that data needs to be arranged for specific charts.

  4. Create a chart from start to finish - Microsoft Support

    Learn how to create a chart in Excel and add a trendline. Visualize your data with a column, bar, pie, line, or scatter chart (or graph) in Office.

  5. Create a PivotChart - Microsoft Support

    Create a PivotChart based on complex data that has text entries and values, or existing PivotTable data, and learn how Excel can recommend a PivotChart for your data.

  6. Rotate a pie chart - Microsoft Support

    You can do this with pie, 3-D pie, and doughnut charts in Microsoft Excel, or with an Excel chart you've copied to PowerPoint, Word, or Outlook. For example, in this chart, a couple of the …

  7. Change the chart type of an existing chart - Microsoft Support

    Let's say you have a clustered column chart type, but for your presentation, you would like to show a pie chart. You can change the type of chart you think would best represent your data …

  8. Vary the colors of same-series data markers in a chart

    Set varying colors of data markers (bars, columns, lines, pie or doughnut slices, dots, and other shapes) automatically in an Office chart.

  9. Video: Create more accessible charts in Excel - Microsoft Support

    The charts and graphs you create in Excel help make complex information easier to understand. But how do you communicate this visual information to people with low vision?

  10. Present your data in a doughnut chart - Microsoft Support

    Using Microsoft Excel, you can quickly turn your data into a doughnut chart, and then use the new formatting features to make that doughnut chart easier to read.