BookmarkSubscribeRSS Feed
☑ This topic is solved. Need further help from the community? Please sign in and ask a new question.
hellorc
Obsidian | Level 7

Hello SAS community,

 

I have quick question related to data structure or formatting. I have the current data that looks like:

 

 

data have;
input id city $ week;
datalines;
1 A 3
1 B 6
1 B 7
1 C 10
;
run;

 

 

But I would actually need to fill the weeks after the first week the person shows up in the city (i.e.):

 

data want;
input id city $ week;
datalines;
1 A 3
1 A 4
1 A 5
1 B 6
1 B 7
1 B 8
1 B 9
1 C 10
;
run;

The week gaps would be filled with the former city value until a city change. There are about 1000 subjects in the data.

 

Might someone be willing to provide assistance how to code it?

 

Thank you

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions
Ksharp
Super User
data have;
input id city $ week;
datalines;
1 A 3
1 B 6
1 B 7
1 C 10
2 A 3
2 B 6
2 B 9
2 C 10
2 C 15
;
run;

data want;
merge have have(keep=id week rename=(id=_id week=_week) firstobs=2);
output;
if id=_id then do;
 do week=week+1 to _week-1;
  output;
 end;
end;
drop _:;
run;

View solution in original post

5 REPLIES 5
yabwon
Onyx | Level 15

Try this:

data have;
input id city $ week;
datalines;
1 A 3
1 B 6
1 B 7
1 C 10
2 A 3
2 B 6
2 B 9
2 C 10
2 C 15
;
run;


data have2;
set have;
by id;
if not first.id;
rename week=week2;
drop city;
run;

data want;
merge have have2; 
by id;
if last.id then 
  output;
else 
  do week = week to week2-1;
    output;
  end;
drop week2;
run;

proc print data = want; 
run;

Bart

_______________
Polish SAS Users Group: www.polsug.com and communities.sas.com/polsug

"SAS Packages: the way to share" at SGF2020 Proceedings (the latest version), GitHub Repository, and YouTube Video.
Hands-on-Workshop: "Share your code with SAS Packages"
"My First SAS Package: A How-To" at SGF2021 Proceedings

SAS Ballot Ideas: one: SPF in SAS, two, and three
SAS Documentation



hellorc
Obsidian | Level 7
Hello yabwon, thank you so much for your reply. I have an extra question if you don't mind. Let's say the final week is 20 for everyone. But the last.id for subject 1 is week=10. and for subject 2 is week=15 as in your code. How would you adjust the code so that there would be:

1 C 10
1 C 11
...
1 C 20

for subject 1?
yabwon
Onyx | Level 15

Try this (for 3 it's 23 just to test if it's covering info from data):

data have;
input id city $ week;
datalines;
1 A 3
1 B 6
1 B 7
1 C 10
2 A 3
2 B 6
2 B 9
2 C 10
2 C 15
3 A 3
3 B 6
3 B 9
3 C 23
;
run;


data have2;
set have;
by id;
if not first.id;
rename week=week2;
drop city;
run;

data want;
merge have have2; 
by id;
if last.id then 
  do week = week to max(week2,20);
    output;
  end;
else 
  do week = week to week2-1;
    output;
  end;
drop week2;
run;

proc print data = want; 
run;

Bart

_______________
Polish SAS Users Group: www.polsug.com and communities.sas.com/polsug

"SAS Packages: the way to share" at SGF2020 Proceedings (the latest version), GitHub Repository, and YouTube Video.
Hands-on-Workshop: "Share your code with SAS Packages"
"My First SAS Package: A How-To" at SGF2021 Proceedings

SAS Ballot Ideas: one: SPF in SAS, two, and three
SAS Documentation



Ksharp
Super User
data have;
input id city $ week;
datalines;
1 A 3
1 B 6
1 B 7
1 C 10
2 A 3
2 B 6
2 B 9
2 C 10
2 C 15
;
run;

data want;
merge have have(keep=id week rename=(id=_id week=_week) firstobs=2);
output;
if id=_id then do;
 do week=week+1 to _week-1;
  output;
 end;
end;
drop _:;
run;
hellorc
Obsidian | Level 7
Thank you both, yabwon and Ksharp!! Both worked!

SAS Innovate 2025: Save the Date

 SAS Innovate 2025 is scheduled for May 6-9 in Orlando, FL. Sign up to be first to learn about the agenda and registration!

Save the date!

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
  • 5 replies
  • 641 views
  • 1 like
  • 3 in conversation