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Corinthian94
Obsidian | Level 7

Hi there,

 

I'm running an analysis where I am looking at weight change in a population of 9472 people. I have the equation: follow up weight - baseline weight = weight change. However, when I looked into the calculations, instead of producing exact values, SAS seems to have rounded to a similar value for a bunch of observations. For example, there is an observation that the equation is 89.813-88.45 = 1.363, but SAS rounds this to 1.3608, along with a bunch of other observations. Is there a reason it does this, and a way to make it not do this? 

Thank you for the help!

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions
Rick_SAS
SAS Super FREQ

I suspect you are looking at formatted numbers, which means that they are rounded to some precision by PROC PRINT or some other SAS procedure. SAS computes numbers using double-precision computations, but it displays only a portion of the raw values. If a variable has a format, the format determines the precision. Otherwise, a default format is used.

 

To see more precision, use the FORMAT statement to explicitly set the format for the columns of values. For example, to get 6 decimal digits for each value, use

 

proc print data=have;
   format FollowupWeight BaselineWeight DiffWeight 10.6;
   var FollowupWeight BaselineWeight DiffWeight;
run;

If you are not using PROC PRINT but are using some other method to view the data, please specify how you are obtaining these numbers. 

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4 REPLIES 4
ballardw
Super User

I say that you should 1) provide the starting values, 2) the code you use to calculate the result, 3) the formats assigned to the variables and 4) the result that you find incorrect.

 

Since SAS always has a format assigned to value you need to show us the format because the values you claim in 89.813-88.45 could be rounded by the format assigned. A format of 8.3 for example will display any value between 89.8125 to 89.81349 as 89.813 and similar with that 88.45. So just typing values does not always mean the value you see is what is used by SAS as those not-displayed not-rounded decimals will be used in calculations.

 

The data values should be in the form of data step code. Instructions here: https://communities.sas.com/t5/SAS-Communities-Library/How-to-create-a-data-step-version-of-your-dat... will show how to turn an existing SAS data set into data step code that can be pasted into a forum code box using the <> icon or attached as text to show exactly what you have and that we can test code against.

Rick_SAS
SAS Super FREQ

I suspect you are looking at formatted numbers, which means that they are rounded to some precision by PROC PRINT or some other SAS procedure. SAS computes numbers using double-precision computations, but it displays only a portion of the raw values. If a variable has a format, the format determines the precision. Otherwise, a default format is used.

 

To see more precision, use the FORMAT statement to explicitly set the format for the columns of values. For example, to get 6 decimal digits for each value, use

 

proc print data=have;
   format FollowupWeight BaselineWeight DiffWeight 10.6;
   var FollowupWeight BaselineWeight DiffWeight;
run;

If you are not using PROC PRINT but are using some other method to view the data, please specify how you are obtaining these numbers. 

Kurt_Bremser
Super User

Here's an example that shows how a format could lead you to think that the values were miscalculated:

data test;
x1 = 89.813;
x2 = 88.4522;
x3 = x1 - x2;
format x2 8.2;
run;

proc print data=test;
run;

Result:

Beob.	x1	x2	x3
1	89.813	88.45	1.3608
Tom
Super User Tom
Super User

How certain are you that A and B actually have EXACTLY those values?

64    data test;
65      a=89.813;
66      c=1.3608;
67      b=a-c;
68      put b= b= 8.2;
69    run;

b=88.4522 b=88.45

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