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What’s New

Qrvey 8.7
Version 8.7 of the Qrvey platform is now available to customers! This version includes new features including area charts, the ability to pivot and export data, as well as numerous bug fixes and performance improvements.
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Qrvey 8.6
Version 8.6 of the Qrvey platform is now available to customers. This version includes several new feature enhancements and performance improvements.
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Required Update for 8.5.1
Attention 8.5.1 customers: for any 8.5.1 instance deployed prior to 08/05/2024, an update is required to ensure you are running the latest images.
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Qrvey 8.5
Version 8.5 (LTS) of the Qrvey platform is now available to customers. This version includes several new features and performance improvements.
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End-of-life Schedule
We've added a new article that lists the features and endpoints that have been scheduled for deprecation. All features and endpoints will be supported for (1) year after the release date of the LTS version that contains the alternative.
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Version: 8.6

Pie Chart

A Pie Chart is essentially a circle divided into slices. The full circle, or “pie” represents 100% of the data points selected. By having categorical data, each slice represents a different category where each slice is proportional to the value it visualizes. Pie charts are the most appropriate when we’re trying to show the proportions of a limited number of subcategories that make up a whole. For example proportions of Yes, No, and Impartial votes as parts of the entire votes count. While this number is fairly arbitrary, having pie charts with more than 10 slices does not provide a good user experience.

pie

Creating a Pie Chart

To create a Pie Chart, we need one column as a Category and one as Values. In the case below, we want to see the composition of each product line in the entire orders. We drag and drop productLine as Category and quantityOrdered as Values. We continue styling the chart in the Configuration Panel and changed the shape to donut.

pie

Styling The Pie Chart

In the Configuration Panel on the right of the Chart Builder, you can style different aspects of your chart.

General

The General section is available for all chart types, and the options vary depending on the chart selected. For more information on the options, see General Chart Settings.

Styles

The Styles section enables you to control various visual elements of the charts, such as colors, labels, and more. It is available for most chart types, and the options vary depending on the chart selected. For a glossary of all styles, see Styles. Style options specific to this chart are listed below.

  • Theme - set one of the predetermined themes for a more unified look of your charts.

  • Match colors across charts - unify the colors of each categorical value throughout the page and application where the same categories of the same dataset are used.

  • Type - decide between a Pie or Donut shape for the chart.

  • Data Labels - enable or disable showing Data Labels, which represent data values from the dataset column assigned to the Value shelf.

  • Values - when checked, it shows the value of the corresponding segment.

  • Percentages - when checked, it shows the percentage of the corresponding segment.

pie

Format

You can apply Conditional Formatting to your Pie Chart.

Filters

You can also add Filters to your data by expanding the Filters section in the configuration panel or by clicking on the Filters button in the toolbar above the canvas. Filters that are created in the Chart Builder are hidden from End Users. These types of filters can’t be edited or interacted with in the view mode. For more information, see Filters.

For more on Pie Charts and other Percent of Total charts, we recommend watching this video.