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6 answers

I'd have to say it's a monthly budget. A certain % for each of your household bills.

2006-09-18 10:20:07 · answer #1 · answered by STONE 5 · 0 0

You upload up a majority of those effects = seventy 4 then you certainly take each and every result, divide it via seventy 4, then multiply via 360°. that supply you the scale of the perspective for the piece of the pie interior the pie chart. as an occasion: 23/seventy 4 * 360° = 112° (i'm rounding to the closest entire degree, which will make the suitable entire not precisely equivalent to 360°, even though it is going to be very close with rounding) 15/seventy 4 * 360° = seventy 3° sixteen/seventy 4 * 360° = seventy 8° 3/seventy 4 * 360° = 15° a million/seventy 4 * 360° = 5° you may make a circle with a compass or tracing a super around shape, then draw one radius from the midsection with a straightedge. Then take a protractor and draw a seventy 3° perspective. Then degree a seventy 8° perspective with the area of that perspective, etc etc. good success!

2016-12-15 10:04:38 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Pie charts are best for comparing 5 or less items with each other, where only one piece of data is being compared. For example, it would be easy to use a pie chart for comparing the amount of sugar in 5 similar cereals; however, if you wanted to compare 2 ingredients for these 5 cereals, a pie chart wouldn't be appropriate.

2006-09-18 10:23:35 · answer #3 · answered by Katyana 4 · 0 0

Percentages are usually illustrated using a pie chart.

For example what federal taxes are spent on could be shown in a pie chart. 20% for senators to take all expenses paid trips to party, 20% in kickbacks to companies moving off shore, 50% to take over countries where there is oil, 9% for election propaganda on TV, and 1% to be divided up amongst federally funded programs.

2006-09-18 10:22:28 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Monthly expenses

Rent, Food, Clothes, Car/Gas, Tolietries, Recreation, Utilities, Phone, and cable are some you can use.

This will give you a better idea of what you spend the most on.

2006-09-18 10:21:54 · answer #5 · answered by butterflykisses427 5 · 0 0

No, too boring. Ask a child in the 5th grade.

2006-09-18 10:20:06 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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