BECAUSE F SORTS BEFORE M.
Please avoid coding all in uppercase you can see how it does not read as easy and sounds like shouting. The character F has a lower ASCII code than M, therefore it appears before M. For these types of scenarios, it is a good idea to have the underlying data as a numeric, and format that value to be the text you want, e.g. (and again note the code casing/indentation):
data have; set have; sexc=ifn(sex="F",2,1); run; proc format; value sex 1="Females" 2="Males"; run; proc tabulate data=have ...; class id age sexc ...; ... format sexc sex.; run;
You will see I create a coded version of the data, with a 1 or 2, then apply a format of the text to this numeric code.
As long as you are willing to specify ORDER=DATA, try sorting your data set before running PROC TABULATE. The sorted order could be BY DESCENDING SEX.
As you may have noticed, ORDER=DATA affects your other CLASS variables as well.
1) Try put order=data at PROC TABULATE
Have a look at the CLASSDATA= option on Proc TABULATE. It allows you to specify a datasets that will determine the ordering of the class variable values, see also sample below.
data classOrder;
infile cards dlm="," truncover;
input
type : $8. origin : $6.
;
cards;
Hybrid,Europe
Hybrid,USA
Hybrid,Asia
Wagon,Europe
Truck,Europe
SUV,Europe
Sedan,Europe
Sports,Europe
;
proc tabulate
data=sashelp.cars
classdata=classorder
order=data
;
class type origin;
table type, origin ;
run;
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