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I have a table sizing problem that I don't understand. doing a simple left join with a small table i added a variable to a table. The strange thing is that this new table with an extra variable (13 instead of 12) has gone from 8.54Gb to 21.17Gb! I can't figure it out, I think the physical memory should have increased only a little.

I report the complete results of the dictionary of the 2 tables in question (note the "filesize" variable)

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions
Reeza
Super User

Then yes, that is correct. 

You have 67,298,471 observations X 200 characters/bytes = 13,459,694,200 bytes = 13.5 GB

 

 

 

 

View solution in original post

10 REPLIES 10
Reeza
Super User
What is the length of the new character variable added?

Reeza
Super User

Then yes, that is correct. 

You have 67,298,471 observations X 200 characters/bytes = 13,459,694,200 bytes = 13.5 GB

 

 

 

 

ballardw
Super User

Show the code for your "simple join".  It is likely that you added records, at a guess about doubling the number of records, because of the particular join.

 

Consider this small example. A "simple join" of two data sets of 6 observations each but the result has 16 observations.

data one;
  input a b;
datalines;
1  1
1  2
1  3
2  11
2  22
3  33
;

data two;
  input a z;
datalines;
1 111
1 222
1 333
2 1111
2 2222
2 3333
;

proc sql;
    create table example as
    select one.a, one.b, two.z
    from one 
         left join
         two 
         on one.a = two.a
   ;
quit;

 

Table size for many discussions is more about the number of observations and variables than bytes.

mariopellegrini
Pyrite | Level 9

this is the code. I also report the data from the dictionary columns of the 2 tables in question

 

proc sql; 
create table RUOLO_DANNI2  as
select RU.* 
      ,C.DES_EDWH as RUOLO_DES
from RUOLO_DANNI1 RU
  left join  EDWH_ODS.CODICE_TIPO_RUOLO C
     on 
             RU.COD_TIPO_RUOLO = C.COD_EDWH 
			 and C.ts_inizio_validita  <= ru.ts_inizio_validita <=  C.ts_fine_validita
             and compress(C.cod_source)='1';
quit;

 

 

Kurt_Bremser
Super User

You added 200 bytes to your obslen, indicating that the new variable is $200 in length. This usually happens when the new variable is assigned a value from a function without properly defining it beforehand with a LENGTH statement.

Please show your code.

mariopellegrini
Pyrite | Level 9

I simply brought the variable forward from another table without specifying the length, thus inheriting the original length

 

proc sql; 
create table RUOLO_DANNI2  as
select RU.* 
      ,C.DES_EDWH as RUOLO_DES
from RUOLO_DANNI1 RU
  left join  EDWH_ODS.CODICE_TIPO_RUOLO C
     on 
             RU.COD_TIPO_RUOLO = C.COD_EDWH 
			 and C.ts_inizio_validita  <= ru.ts_inizio_validita <=  C.ts_fine_validita
             and compress(C.cod_source)='1';
quit;
Reeza
Super User
,C.DES_EDWH as RUOLO_DES LENGTH=$20

Or whatever makes sense for you to try and reduce the size.
Kurt_Bremser
Super User

Well, an almost tripling of the observation size will also result in tripling the dataset size.

Use the COMPRESS=YES dataset option if the new variable is mostly empty.

Tom
Super User Tom
Super User

 

Use the COMPRESS=YES system option (or COMPRESS=YES dataset option if you only want it to apply to one dataset) and it will take a lot less space on the disk.

 

Why attach a spreadsheet to share 8 numbers?

 

memname  nobs   obslen   nvar   compress   filesize 
RUOLO_DANNI1   67,298,471        136      12  NO      9,169,469,440
RUOLO_DANNI2   67,298,471        336      13  NO    22,734,503,936

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