I find that one of the best ways of learning something is to find the silliest possible use-case and do that. Usually you end up learning some advanced things just by accident.
Nice chart. How do you get both ends of the segments to (dynamically) glow? I can see it in the initial chart, but it wasn't covered in the example creation.
Good point. I hadn't noticed the difference. My main guess is that it's the order that the parts are rendered in, so swapping the order of the series and which is on which axis probably will change that.
@@ChrisArmstrongChemistry Ah I figured it out, instead of filling the unfilled segment part of the donuts with the same background colour, use No Fill.
Wow! This opened my eyes to the dynamic chart, thank you for sharing.
Even though I'm a beginner, I was able to follow and learn a lot from this video. Thanks for taking the time to make it!
I find that one of the best ways of learning something is to find the silliest possible use-case and do that. Usually you end up learning some advanced things just by accident.
Jeeezz. No comments, 16 likes?! This is really cool Excel stuff! (And PowerPoint as well). Your channel is stronly under-valued.
Wait, when did this video get any attention?!?
Nice chart. How do you get both ends of the segments to (dynamically) glow? I can see it in the initial chart, but it wasn't covered in the example creation.
Good point. I hadn't noticed the difference.
My main guess is that it's the order that the parts are rendered in, so swapping the order of the series and which is on which axis probably will change that.
@@ChrisArmstrongChemistry Ah I figured it out, instead of filling the unfilled segment part of the donuts with the same background colour, use No Fill.
Very Confusing