Pie Charts (Report Builder 2.0)

Pie charts and doughnut charts display data as a proportion of the whole. Pie charts are most commonly used to make comparisons between groups. Pie and doughnut charts, along with pyramid and funnel charts, comprise a group of charts known as Shape charts. Shape charts have no axes. When a numeric field is dropped on a Shape chart, the chart calculates the percentage of each value to the total. For more information on Shape charts, see Shape Charts (Report Builder 2.0).

The following illustration shows a 3-D pie chart with data labels formatted as percentages. The legend is positioned in the right-center.

Pie chart

Variations

  • Exploded pie. A pie chart where all of the slices are moved away from the center of the pie. In addition to the exploded pie chart, in which all slices are separated, you can create an exploded slice chart, in which only one slice is called out.

  • Doughnut. A pie chart that has an open space in the center.

  • Exploded doughnut. A doughnut chart where all of the slices are moved away from the center of the doughnut.

  • 3D Pie. A pie chart that has a 3D style applied.

  • 3D Exploded Pie. An exploded pie chart that has a 3-D style applied.

Data Considerations for Display on a Pie Chart

  • Pie charts are popular in reports because of their visual impact. However, pie charts are a very simplified chart type that may not best represent your data. Consider using a pie chart only after the data has been aggregated to seven data points or less.

  • Pie charts display each data group as a separate slice on the chart. You must add at least one data field and one category field to the pie chart. If more than one data field is added to a pie chart, the pie chart will display both data fields in the same chart.

  • Null, empty, negative, and zero values have no effect when calculating ratios. For this reason, these values are not shown on a pie chart. If you want to visually indicate these types of values on your chart, change the chart type to be something other than a pie chart.

  • If you are defining your own colors on a pie chart using a custom palette, be sure that you have enough colors in your palette to display each data point with its own unique color. For more information, see Formatting Series Colors on a Chart (Report Builder 2.0).

  • Unlike most other chart types, a pie chart will display individual data points, and not individual series, in its legend.

  • A pie chart requires at least two values in order to make a valid comparison between proportions. If your pie chart contains only one color, verify that you have added a category field to group by. When the pie chart does not contain categories, it aggregates the values from your data field into one value for display. For more information about how to add data to a chart, see Adding Data to a Chart Data Region (Report Builder 2.0).

  • Like all other chart types, the pie chart generates colors based on the color values contained in the default palette. This approach might cause different pie charts to color data points differently when you are using multiple pie charts in a report. If you have several pie charts in your report, you might want to manually set colors for each category group in order to retain the same color across different charts. For more information about how to define colors on a chart, see Formatting Series Colors on a Chart (Report Builder 2.0).

Applying Drawing Styles to a Pie Chart

You can add special drawing styles to the pie chart to increase its visual impact. Drawing styles include bevel and concave effects. These effects are available only on a 2D pie chart. The following illustration shows an example of the bevel and concave drawing styles on a pie chart.

Pie Drawing Styles

For more information, see How to: Add Bevel, Emboss, and Texture Styles to a Chart (Report Builder 2.0).

Displaying Percentage Values on a Pie Chart

Like other Shape charts, pie charts represent proportions of the total. As a result, it is common to format pie chart labels as percentages. In order to be consistent with other chart types, the chart does not display percentage labels by default. For more information about how to display values as percentages on the chart, see How to: Display Percentage Values on a Pie Chart (Report Builder 2.0). For more information about how to format numbers as percentages in your report, see Formatting Numbers and Dates (Report Builder 2.0).

Pie chart with data point labels as percentages

Exploding the Maximum Point in a Pie Chart

In addition to the exploded pie chart type, which can be set from the Select Chart Type dialog, you can explode individual slices on a pie chart. This feature highlights an individual data point on the pie chart. This differs from the exploded pie chart type, which separates all data points on the pie chart. The following illustration shows a 3D pie chart with the maximum data point exploded.

Pie chart with maximum point separated

For more information, see How to: Explode a Single Point on a Pie Chart (Report Builder 2.0).

Preventing Overlapped Labels on a Pie Chart

If there are a lot of data points on a pie chart, the data labels will overlap. There are several ways to prevent labels from overlapping:

Consolidating Small Slices on a Pie Chart

When the pie chart has too many points, the data becomes obscured and hard to read. If your data has many small data points, there are two ways of collecting multiple pie slices:

  1. Collect smaller data slices into one slice on the pie chart. This is useful in situations where, for example, you want the pie chart to have an "Other" data point that simply collects the remaining data. For more information, see How to: Collect Small Slices on a Pie Chart (Report Builder 2.0).

  2. Collect small slices into a supplementary pie chart. The second pie chart does not display in the designer. Instead, during report processing, the chart calculates if a second pie chart is necessary to be shown, based on the values of the data points. If so, the values are added into another pie chart.