 Sammy asked the question, how can I make a pie chart from a SharePoint list? My SharePoint list has a column called Compliance, multiple choice, and Compliance Attention out of Compliance. I want a dashboard page and power apps that has a pie chart showing compliance status of all units. Next to that, a list of vehicles, attention, or out of compliance. Then when I add a pie chart, it is not pulling the Compliance column as an option, and I'm not sure how to write the function correctly. Any help appreciated? Should we write that closer? Sammy is trying to do? Wouldn't they better have that SharePoint list that can feed into even up into Power BI, which would actually put it on a dashboard or even through Excel, up in whichever way it goes to then have it go as a pie chart. Which way has it got to go? Yeah, I was looking at, yeah. That's my suggestion was definitely Power BI, because that's easiest way to make a dashboard. I mean, there used to be that charts and graphs web part, but that does not exist in the modern views. If you have a classic SharePoint, you can use the charts and graphs web part of it. If you're in modern, then Power BI is definitely the way to do that. It looks like it says that it's not pulling the Compliance column as an option, and so I'm not sure how to write the function correctly. There are some pie charts that are limited to how many fields you can select based on the way they've got the formatting set up. So if they're doing a pie chart even in Power BI, but in the function, the way the function is written, it could just simply be a character or the way the function is written that just needs to be reviewed. It could be the way they've got it formatted. It could be the way they've got their filter set up. Unfortunately, without looking at it, I couldn't tell you what is not working properly, but I would say Power BI is probably the right way to display it. My concern is it says, a dashboard page in Power Apps. So they've got something that's been custom-created and therefore it's then not flowing through, because Power Apps is a whole another space. I threw through for developers, a couple JavaScript libraries in here that do very nice pie charts. So if you're trying to roll your own and you feel you have to do that, Chart.js or Canvas.js are both good to work with in terms of building pie charts and getting them to expose additional data, and they look pretty. Pretty is important. Of course, the soapboxes, it's not about the pictures, it's about the data behind it. You go so deep. I'm all on the surface. I like that. Got to have the right data, got to have the right queries, got to have the right information for it to pull through. The pretty pictures are the easy part if your data is set up properly. Yeah. I don't know. If it's not in alignment with the latest TikTok memes that are out there, I don't understand. It just, oh, so. If we do TikToks about Power BI. Come on, isn't it Twitch now? You don't say moving on, moving on? No, no. It's, yeah, is there a pie chart dance that's out there? Is it, I don't know. Good luck with that.