A pie chart (also known as pie graph) is a circular chart divided into sectors, illustrating relative magnitudes or frequencies or percents. In a pie chart, the arc length of each sector (and consequently its central angle and area), is proportional to the quantity it represents. Together, the sectors create a full disk. It is named for its resemblance to a pie which has been sliced
A pie chart is a circle divided into sections to show the relative proportions of a set of things. A circular graph having radii dividing the circle into sectors proportional in angle and area to the relative size of the quantities represented. Also called circle graph. a circle divided into parts by lines coming from the centre to show how big the different parts of a total amount are
A visual representation of information showing parts as a proportion, percentage or fraction of the whole Pie charts are circles divided into sections resembling pies cut into pieces of different sizes A pie chart is an alternative format of displaying information that could be presented in a simple table
The graphical representation of information via a circle divided into wedges The width of each wedge is determined by what percentage of the circle it represents
A graphic representation of quantitative information by means of a circle divided into sectors, in which the relative sizes of the areas of the sectors correspond to the relative sizes or proportion of the quantities
A graphical device for presenting data summaries based on subdivision of a circle into sectors that correspond to the relative frequency for each class
A circular chart in which the size of each slice is proportional to its percentage of the whole See: Column Chart, Bar Chart, Line Chart, Area Chart, X-Y Plot Chart, High/Low Chart