BookmarkSubscribeRSS Feed
☑ This topic is solved. Need further help from the community? Please sign in and ask a new question.
miss2223
Fluorite | Level 6

Below is my code. No error running the code, but I want to see the output data. Is there a way to check the output for 'customer_details' from SAS? Also I want to export the data to excel after. 

 

%macro TECHNOLOGY();
%let _DT1=2022-03-01;
%let DT1=%sysfunc(inputn(&_DT1, yymmdd10.), date9.);
%put &DT1.;

%let _DT2=2022-08-31;
%let DT2=%sysfunc(inputn(&_DT2, yymmdd10.), date9.);
%put &DT2.;

data customer_details;
set work.installation;
where Contract = 'Y' AND Colour in ('Red', 'Orange', 'Blue')
and contract_date_start="&dt1"d and contract_date_end="&dt2"d;
run;
%mend TECHNOLOGY;

 

Many Thanks!! 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions
PaigeMiller
Diamond | Level 26

@miss2223 wrote:

Below is my code. No error running the code, but I want to see the output data. Is there a way to check the output for 'customer_details' from SAS? Also I want to export the data to excel after. 

 

%macro TECHNOLOGY();
%let _DT1=2022-03-01;
%let DT1=%sysfunc(inputn(&_DT1, yymmdd10.), date9.);
%put &DT1.;

%let _DT2=2022-08-31;
%let DT2=%sysfunc(inputn(&_DT2, yymmdd10.), date9.);
%put &DT2.;

data customer_details;
set work.installation;
where Contract = 'Y' AND Colour in ('Red', 'Orange', 'Blue')
and contract_date_start="&dt1"d and contract_date_end="&dt2"d;
run;
%mend TECHNOLOGY;

 

Many Thanks!! 


Perhaps you need to actually call the macro at the end?

 

%macro TECHNOLOGY();
%let _DT1=2022-03-01;
%let DT1=%sysfunc(inputn(&_DT1, yymmdd10.), date9.);
%put &DT1.;

%let _DT2=2022-08-31;
%let DT2=%sysfunc(inputn(&_DT2, yymmdd10.), date9.);
%put &DT2.;

data customer_details;
set work.installation;
where Contract = 'Y' AND Colour in ('Red', 'Orange', 'Blue')
and contract_date_start="&dt1"d and contract_date_end="&dt2"d;
run;
%mend TECHNOLOGY;
%technology()   /* <-- you have to actually call the macro, like this */
--
Paige Miller

View solution in original post

4 REPLIES 4
Tom
Super User Tom
Super User

I don't understand the question. 

Just look at the data the same way you would any other SAS dataset.

 

For example you could just use PROC PRINT.

proc print data=customer_details;
run;

There is no need to define a macro to run that code.  There is nothing conditional happening there.  The %LET statements will work fine as open SAS code instead.

 

Also there is also no need to set the macro variables to one representation of a date and then convert them to another.  Why not just start with the date in a style that will work with the date literals to begin with?

andreas_lds
Jade | Level 19

Sorry, but i don't understand the problem, too.

 

I would remove all macro statements and verify that the program does, what it should do. Your macro-variables should not start with an underscore, some automatic variables, like _ClientProjectPath, use the underscore to identify them as automatic variables.

So the data step would look like

data customer_details;
  set work.installation;
  where Contract = 'Y' AND Colour in ('Red', 'Orange', 'Blue')
    and contract_date_start="01Mar2022"d and contract_date_end="31Aug2022"d;
run;

Now the export:

proc export data= work.customer_details dbms= xlsx file= "PATH/customer_details.xlsx" replace;
run;

Why do you want a macro at all?

 

Note: code is untested.

miss2223
Fluorite | Level 6

Thanks for explaining it. 

 

It works fine without having %macro TECHNOLOGY; on the top row. 

 

May I ask why having %macro SAS does not give the output data tab as usual? I realised quite a few of the macro code are doing the same thing. 

 

PaigeMiller
Diamond | Level 26

@miss2223 wrote:

Below is my code. No error running the code, but I want to see the output data. Is there a way to check the output for 'customer_details' from SAS? Also I want to export the data to excel after. 

 

%macro TECHNOLOGY();
%let _DT1=2022-03-01;
%let DT1=%sysfunc(inputn(&_DT1, yymmdd10.), date9.);
%put &DT1.;

%let _DT2=2022-08-31;
%let DT2=%sysfunc(inputn(&_DT2, yymmdd10.), date9.);
%put &DT2.;

data customer_details;
set work.installation;
where Contract = 'Y' AND Colour in ('Red', 'Orange', 'Blue')
and contract_date_start="&dt1"d and contract_date_end="&dt2"d;
run;
%mend TECHNOLOGY;

 

Many Thanks!! 


Perhaps you need to actually call the macro at the end?

 

%macro TECHNOLOGY();
%let _DT1=2022-03-01;
%let DT1=%sysfunc(inputn(&_DT1, yymmdd10.), date9.);
%put &DT1.;

%let _DT2=2022-08-31;
%let DT2=%sysfunc(inputn(&_DT2, yymmdd10.), date9.);
%put &DT2.;

data customer_details;
set work.installation;
where Contract = 'Y' AND Colour in ('Red', 'Orange', 'Blue')
and contract_date_start="&dt1"d and contract_date_end="&dt2"d;
run;
%mend TECHNOLOGY;
%technology()   /* <-- you have to actually call the macro, like this */
--
Paige Miller

SAS Innovate 2025: Call for Content

Are you ready for the spotlight? We're accepting content ideas for SAS Innovate 2025 to be held May 6-9 in Orlando, FL. The call is open until September 16. Read more here about why you should contribute and what is in it for you!

Submit your idea!

Mastering the WHERE Clause in PROC SQL

SAS' Charu Shankar shares her PROC SQL expertise by showing you how to master the WHERE clause using real winter weather data.

Find more tutorials on the SAS Users YouTube channel.

Discussion stats
  • 4 replies
  • 633 views
  • 3 likes
  • 4 in conversation