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Melk
Lapis Lazuli | Level 10

I am running a 2 sample wilcoxon and also supplementing my p-value with with medians using proc means. However, the number of obs in each are different: proc means reports I have 3 in my class variable whereas npar1way reports I have 2. What can be the reason for this?

 

proc means data=x median;
    where group = "A";
    class sub;
    var change;
run;

proc npar1way data=x wilcoxon;
    where group = "A";
    class sub;
    var change;
    exact;
run;

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions
svh
Lapis Lazuli | Level 10 svh
Lapis Lazuli | Level 10

You can add 'nmiss' to your PROC MEANS statement to try to examine missingness of the continuous variables at the class level. 

 

Or, have you tried running a PROC FREQ to examine the categorical variables and their frequencies. That might help.

 

Such as 

 

PROC FREQ DATA=X;

  TABLES SUB;

  TABLES GROUP;

  TABLES SUB*GROUP;

RUN;

View solution in original post

2 REPLIES 2
svh
Lapis Lazuli | Level 10 svh
Lapis Lazuli | Level 10

You can add 'nmiss' to your PROC MEANS statement to try to examine missingness of the continuous variables at the class level. 

 

Or, have you tried running a PROC FREQ to examine the categorical variables and their frequencies. That might help.

 

Such as 

 

PROC FREQ DATA=X;

  TABLES SUB;

  TABLES GROUP;

  TABLES SUB*GROUP;

RUN;

Rick_SAS
SAS Super FREQ

In PROC MEANS, "NObs" is the total number of observations in each group. It includes missing and nonmissing. To see the number of observations that are used in the analysis, put N and NMISS on the PROC MEANS statement:

 

proc means data=x N NMISS median ;
    where group = "A";
    class sub;
    var change;
run;

The "N" column should match the "N" column in NPAR1WAy.

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