Pie Charts are useful when we want to show what percentage of the whole each catagory represents.
To construct a pie chart from raw (unprocessed) data, we need to find what percentage of the whole each catagory represents.
Drawing a pie chart by hand provides a deeper understanding of this type of graphs, and helps build our intuition on determining whether a computer-generated chart is correct.
Age Range |
19 Yrs and Younger |
20 to 39 Yrs |
40 to 59 Yrs |
60 to 79 Yrs |
80 to 99 Yrs |
100 Yrs and Older |
Population |
81,551,798 | 82,055,558 | 81,164,640 | 38,463,652 | 10,358,920 | 60,836 |
First, make a table that shows the percentage of population in each age group:
Age Range |
19 Yrs and Younger |
20 to 39 Yrs |
40 to 59 Yrs |
60 to 79 Yrs |
80 to 99 Yrs |
100 Yrs and Older |
Population |
Next, convert the percentages in the table above to fractions with a common denomiator. It's easiest to sub-divide the "pie" if the denominator is a power of 2:
Age Range |
19 Yrs and Younger |
20 to 39 Yrs |
40 to 59 Yrs |
60 to 79 Yrs |
80 to 99 Yrs |
100 Yrs and Older |
Population |
Finally, fill in the pie chart using the fractions above:
Data from the 1990 census show that the populations of Alabama and California were 4,040,583 and 29,760,021, respectively.
(a) According to the 2000 census the population of Alabama in 2000 was 4,447,100. Verify that the percent change in Alabama's population from 1990 to 2000 is 10.1 percent.
The change in population is 4,447,100 - 4,040,583 = 406,517. The percentage
of 1990 population that this represents is:
406,517 / 4,040,583 = 0.1006, which is approx. 10.1 percent.
(b) Use the information given in the first table of Example 1.8 to find the population of California in 2000.
From the table, we have California with a 13.8 percent increase in population
from 1990 to 2000.
So, 0.138 = change in population / 29,760,021, which gives an approx. change
in population of 4,106,883. This then gives a 2000 population of 4,106,883 +
29,760,021 = 33,866,904.