circular sectors of the total circle. The length of the arc, or the area of each sector, is proportional to its value. Normal Pie is a sub-type which shows sectors as colored areas of the total pie, for one data column only. In the created chart, you can click and drag any sector to separate that sector from the remaining pie or to join it back.
Exploded pie is a sub-type which shows the sectors already separated from each other. In the created chart, you can click and drag any sector to move it along a radial from the pie's center. Doughnut is a sub-type that shows multiple data columns. Each data column is shown as one doughnut shape with a hole inside, where the next data column can be shown.
In the chart created, you can click and drag an outer sector to move it along a radial from the doughnut's center. Exploded doughnut is a sub- type that shows the outer sectors already separated from the remaining doughnut. In the created chart, you can click and drag an outer sector to move it along a radial from the doughnut's center. Figure: .
Pie Chart Area chart An area chart shows values as points on the y-axis. The x-axis shows categories. The y-values of each data series are connected by a line. The area between each two lines is filled with a colour.
The area chart's focus is to emphasise the changes from one category to the next. Normal - this sub-type plots all values as absolute y-values. It first plots the area of the last column in the data range, then the next to last, and so on, and finally the first column of data is drawn. Thus, if the values in the first column are higher than the other values, the last drawn area will hide the other areas.
Stacked - this sub-type plots values cumulatively stacked on each other. It ensures that all values are visible, and no data set is hidden by others. However, the y-values no longer represent absolute values, except for the last