
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.
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.
Creating charts from start to finish - Microsoft Support
Creating charts has never been a one-step process, but we’ve made it easier to complete all of the steps in Excel 2013. Get started with a chart that’s recommended for your data, and then …
Create a chart with recommended charts - Microsoft Support
Learn how to create a chart in Excel with recommended charts. Excel can analyze your data and make chart suggestions for you.
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.
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 …
Present your data in a column chart - Microsoft Support
To create a column chart: Enter data in a spreadsheet. Select the data. On the Insert tab, select Insert Column or Bar Chart and choose a column chart option. You can optionally format the …
Add a trend or moving average line to a chart - Microsoft Support
Learn how to add a trendline in Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook to display visual data trends. Format a trend or moving average line to a chart.
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.
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?