Change the look of bars, wedges and more in Keynote on Apple Vision Pro
A data series is a set of related values in a graph — for example, all the bars of the same colour in a bar graph, or a single line in a line graph.
You can emphasise trends in your graph by changing the appearance, position or spacing of one or more of the data series.
Apply a different style to a graph
Tap the graph, then tap in the navigation bar at the top of the window.
Tap Graph, then tap one of the graph styles.
Change colours, shadows, spacing and other options
You can change the look of a graph by adding colours, textures, shadows and more. You can change the look of the entire graph, or change individual data series in a graph to differentiate them from other series. For bar graphs, for example, you can fill the bars in each series with a different colour or a colour gradient, apply a different outline (stroke) style and more. For scatter plots, you can change the symbol that represents each point and add connection lines between the points.
Note: You can’t change the look of a single data point in a series (a single bar in a bar chart, for example). All changes you make apply to every data point in the series.
Tap the graph, then tap in the navigation bar at the top of the window.
Do one of the following:
Apply a coordinated colour palette to all the data series: Tap Graph, then tap a thumbnail at the top of the Graph tab. All the colours in the chart change at once.
Apply colours, images or textures to all the data series: Tap Style, tap General, then tap Graph Colours. Tap Colours, Images or Textures, then tap a collection to apply it.
Change the colour, gradient or image for individual pieces of the graph: Tap Graph, tap Edit Series, then tap the name of the datum whose appearance you want to change. Tap Fill, then tap Preset, Colour, Gradient or Image.
The changes affect only the selected data series. To change another series, tap one of its elements, then make changes.
Change the spacing in bar or column charts: Tap Style, tap General, then pinch and drag the slider for Gaps Between Columns, Gaps Between Bars or Gaps Between Sets.
Add rounded corners to bar, column, mixed and two-axis charts: Tap Style, then pinch and drag the Rounded Corners slider, or tap the percentage under Rounded Corners and enter a new value.
Change the depth of a 3D graph and the shape of series elements: Tap Graph, then adjust the Depth slider.
Resize the centre hole of a doughnut chart: Pinch and drag the Inner Radius slider, or tap the percentage below Inner Radius and enter a new value
Bevel the edges between series or wedges in 3D stacked and pie charts: Tap Graph, then turn on Bevels.
Change the grid style of radar charts: Tap Graph, then adjust the options below Grid Style.
Add or change data symbols in line, scatter and radar charts
You can change the symbols used to represent data in line, scatter and radar charts.
Tap the graph to select it, then tap in the navigation bar at the top of the window.
Tap Style, tap General, tap Data Symbol, tap Data Symbol again, then choose a symbol, or choose None to remove symbols from the graph.
To change the look of data symbols for only one data series, tap the graph to select it, tap , tap Graph, then tap Edit Series.
Tap the series whose symbol you want to change, then do any of the following:
Change the shape of data symbols: Tap Data Symbol, tap Data Symbol again, then choose a symbol, or choose None to remove symbols for this data series.
Change the size of data symbols: Tap Data Symbol, then tap or next to Size, or set the size to Auto for automatic sizing.
Change the colour of data symbols: Tap Data Symbol, tap Colour in the Fill section, then tap to select Preset, Colour, Gradient or Image fill. (You can only change the fill colour for some data symbols.)
Tap Use Series Stroke Colour to revert to presets.
Change the outline of the data symbols: Tap Data Symbol, turn on Stroke to add an outline, then change the style, colour and weight.
If you can’t edit a graph, you may need to unlock it. See Lock or unlock objects.