:Hi:
It depends on what your procedures are. One solution is to put your procedure into a Macro program and invoke the macro program one time for each by group. This gives you the chance to "flatten" the links in the Table of Contents.
The use of ODS PROCLABEL and/or CONTENTS= for REPORT, PRINT or TABULATE do give you a lot of control -- however, none of them will give you control over the BYLINE.
Another option is to use the ODS DOCUMENT facility, with PROC DOCUMENT to rearrange, rename and then replay your output objects. Some examples of ODS DOCUMENT are listed in these blog posts.
cynthia
:Hi:
It depends on what your procedures are. One solution is to put your procedure into a Macro program and invoke the macro program one time for each by group. This gives you the chance to "flatten" the links in the Table of Contents.
The use of ODS PROCLABEL and/or CONTENTS= for REPORT, PRINT or TABULATE do give you a lot of control -- however, none of them will give you control over the BYLINE.
Another option is to use the ODS DOCUMENT facility, with PROC DOCUMENT to rearrange, rename and then replay your output objects. Some examples of ODS DOCUMENT are listed in these blog posts.
cynthia
Hi:
I would first try
Options nobyline;
to see whether that controls the BYLINE enough by just turning it off. As for the old (2008 or earlier) links, I'm not sure whether those older postings are still around.
But the point of the older postings was that ODS DOCUMENT might give you the control you want IF you want to rearrange and replay the output. If all you want to do is turn off the BYLINE, then ODS DOCUMENT is overkill for that.
Cynthia
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