
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.
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 bar of …
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.
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.
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 state labels are …
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.
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.
Add a legend to a chart - Microsoft Support
Learn how to add a legend to a chart, retrieve a missing legend, and adjust its settings. Add, edit, or remove a chart legend in Excel.
Create charts with Copilot in Excel - Microsoft Support
Open Excel. From the Home tab, select the Copilot button. Make sure to format your data in a table or supported range. Ask Copilot to create the kind of chart you want. You can copy and paste one of …
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?