68.4 degrees.
No it can't.
A circle graph may be used when there is some meaning to the total of the observations. It may be a sensible option when there are at most seven sectors, none of which are too small.
you draw a circle and then put it on a graph
Yes you can. First, determine the percentage of the whole is represented by each slice of your circle (or pie) chart. Then make a bar for each slice that is the same percentage of the height of you bar graph. If you graph represents absolute number out of a total, the same principle applies.
360% is the total percent. its what all the pieces of a circle graph should add up to!
A single number cannot be turned into a percent for a circle graph. You need a total. If the number is N and the total is T then the percentage is 100*N/T and then, for a circle graph, the relevant segment should subtend an angle of 360*N/T degrees (or 2*pi*N/T radians).
18 degrees is 5% on a circle graph.
50
68.4 degrees.
It is: 5%
No. A circle graph - or pie graph - is designed so that the whole circle represents 100%. It is, therefore, not possible for the graph to represent more than 100%.
you should watch that the graph equals 100 percent
half of the circle plus a little more
A circle is 360 degrees, so the answer is 43.2/360.
In a circle graph it is easier to see shares of the total than in other kinds of graphs.
Circle Graph!