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Module 29 : Doughnut Charts
29.1 Doughnut Charts If you have data that is arranged in columns or rows in your Excel worksheet, you can turn your data into a doughnut chart, which looks similar to a pie chart, but with a “hole” in the middle. In the newer versions of Excel (2007 and higher), this function allows you to add another layer of data to be able to compare proportions from two different data sets. If percentages are used, each ring will total 100%. It is important to note that doughnut charts are...
Lessons
- Module 1 : Introduction to Excel
- Module 2 : Add
- Module 3 : Multiply
- Module 4 : Subtraction in Excel
- Module 5 : Dividing
- Module 6 : Sort
- Module 7 : Percentage
- Module 8 : Running Totals
- Module 9 : Print
- Module 10 : Paste Special
- Module 11 : Merge
- Module 12 : Filter
- Module 13 : AVERAGE
- Module 14 : AVERAGEIF
- Module 15 : SUMIF Formula
- Module 16 : IF Formula
- Module 17 : VLOOKUP
- Module 18 : HLOOKUP
- Module 19 : COUNTIF Formula
- Module 20 : COUNTBLANK
- Module 21 : COUNTA Formula
- Module 22 : COUNT Formula
- Module 23 : CONCATENATE
- Module 24 : TRANSPOSE
- Module 25 : DATE Formula
- Module 26 : MONTH Formula
- Module 27 : Pivot Tables
- Module 28 : Pie Charts
- Module 29 : Doughnut Charts
- Module 30 : Line Charts
- Module 31 : Column Charts
- Module 32 : Bar Charts
- Module 33 : Number Formatting
- Module 34 : Create Borders
- Module 35 : Conditional Formatting
- Module 36: Comments