Hi Team,
I have a variable with values Y and N . Except that for one observation it is LEV.
I wrote a format as shown below;
value $SER
"Y", "LEV " = "YES"
"N"="NO"
;
RUN;
i apply the format
format variable $ser.
Unfortunately, the LEV stays as LEV and its messing my proc freq!!!!!
I want it to convert to YES
Could anyone help me please???
Thanks
Sorry, I had capital "YES" and "Yes".
Try this:
PROC FORMAT;
VALUE $SER
"Y" = "Yes"
"LEV " = "Yes"
"N"="NO"
;
QUIT;
DATA temp;
input x $;
cards;
Y
Y
N
LEV
N
Y
;
PROC FREQ DATA = temp;
TABLES x;
FORMAT x $ser.;
RUN;
I tried all the options like copy pasting the LEV from the dataset while creating format.
adding spaces to the left and to the right and so on.doesnt work out!!!!
Hi.
How about this?
PROC FORMAT;
VALUE $SER
"Y" = "Yes"
"LEV " = "YES"
"N"="NO"
;
QUIT;
Hi,
Thanks for the reply. It doesnt help...
Thanks
Sorry, I had capital "YES" and "Yes".
Try this:
PROC FORMAT;
VALUE $SER
"Y" = "Yes"
"LEV " = "Yes"
"N"="NO"
;
QUIT;
DATA temp;
input x $;
cards;
Y
Y
N
LEV
N
Y
;
PROC FREQ DATA = temp;
TABLES x;
FORMAT x $ser.;
RUN;
This might work fine . But in My situation I do not understand how LEV is written.
Do youi recommend removing leading and trailing spaces if any///////////????
Could you show me how to acheive that?
Thanks
Say, one way would be to use the compress function on your variable:
data temp2;
set temp;
/*remove blanks*/
z = compress(x);
format z $ser.;
run;
proc freq data = temp2;
tables z;
run;
Hey Thanks a ton;
I decided to see what its length is and put so many trailing blanks. and went to see the attributes.
Its displayed as "LEV" in the dataset but when i pull using IN option(filtering on the editor) to see the different types I found it with the full form..
LEVEL. So I put "LEVEL"="YES" in my format immediately and it worked.
Thanks for your time.
Great Help
Don't miss out on SAS Innovate - Register now for the FREE Livestream!
Can't make it to Vegas? No problem! Watch our general sessions LIVE or on-demand starting April 17th. Hear from SAS execs, best-selling author Adam Grant, Hot Ones host Sean Evans, top tech journalist Kara Swisher, AI expert Cassie Kozyrkov, and the mind-blowing dance crew iLuminate! Plus, get access to over 20 breakout sessions.
Learn how use the CAT functions in SAS to join values from multiple variables into a single value.
Find more tutorials on the SAS Users YouTube channel.