Step 3 − Click on the LAYOUT tab on the ribbon. Step 2 − Drag a Field to Vertical Multiples. Multiples are also called Trellis Charts. You can have Multiples arranged side by side, making it easy to compare many different values at the same time.
Multiples are a series of charts with identical X and Y axes. Multiples: A Set of Charts with the Same Axes The other Slices in the Pie and all other Pie Dots will gray out. Step 9 − Place the cursor on one of the Dots and click on it. The details of the Pie Slice are displayed. Step 8 − Place the cursor on one of the Dots. Each Color in the Pie representing the category of the Medals. Step 6 − You can also verify that below the Power View Fields List, the Geographic field is in the Locations Box and Numeric Field is in the Σ SIZE Box. The data, viz., the geographic location and the numeric information relating to the size of the dot will be displayed. The size of the dot is the value of the corresponding numeric field. Power View creates a map with a dot for every geographic location. The Table Visualization converts into Map Visualization. Step 4 − Click on Map in the Switch Visualization group. Step 3 − Click on DESIGN tab on the ribbon. Step 2 − Drag a numeric field such as Count to the table. Step 1 − Drag a Geographic Field such as Country/Region, State/Province, or City from Power View Fields List to the table. When you add a multivalue series, you get pie charts on the map, with the size of the pie chart showing the size of the total. The larger the value, the bigger the dot. Adding locations and fields places dots on the map. To make maps work, Power View has to send the data to Bing through a secured web connection for geocoding. Maps in Power View use Bing map tiles, so you can zoom and pan as you would with any other Bing map. You can use Maps to display your data in the context of geography. All the bubbles of that color will be highlighted and other bubbles will be grayed out. You can pause at any point to study the data in more detail. The bubbles travel, grow, and shrink to show how the values change based on the PLAY AXIS. A Time Line with Play button will be displayed below the Bubble Chart Visualization. Step 7 − Drag the Year field to PLAY AXIS. The bubbles will be colored by the values of the field in the COLOR box. Step 6 − Drag the field NOC_CountryRegion to the COLOR Box. The color of the circles is the X VALUE and given in the Legend. The data points are circles of the size represented by the values of Data points. The Scatter Chart Visualization converts into Bubble Chart Visualization. Step 5 − Drag field NOC_CountryRegion to Σ X VALUE. The Data points are little circles and all are of same size and same color. The Table Visualization converts into Scatter Chart Visualization. Step 1 − Add one Category Field and one Numeric Field to the Table. In a Bubble Chart, a third numeric field controls the size of the data points. In Scatter charts, the x-axis displays one numeric field and the y-axis displays another, making it easy to see the relationship between the two values for all the items in the chart. You can use the Bubble and Scatter charts to display many related data in one chart. Step 5 − Only the specific row containing the data specific to the SLICE will be displayed in the TABLE VISUALIZATION above. Step 4 − Click on a SLICE in the Pie Chart Visualization. Now, with SLICES, you can visualize the count of Medals for men and for women in each country. Step 3 − Drag Field Gender in the Power View Fields List to the SLICES Box as shown below. Step 2 − Click on Pie Chart Visualization. Step 1 − Add Field Gender to the Table above. You can also make your Pie Chart Visualization sophisticated by adding more features. You now have a Simple Pie Chart Visualization wherein the count of Medals are shown by the Pie Size, and Countries by Colors. The Table Visualization converts into Pie Chart Visualization. Step 3 − Click on Pie as shown in the image given below. Step 2 − Click on Other Chart in the Switch Visualization group. Step 1 − Click on the Table Visualization as shown below. You can have simple Pie Chart Visualizations in Power View.