Downloading models from SAS Visual Forecasting
Beginning in Stable release 2022.1.1 (May 2022), you can download models from the Interactive Modeling Node in Visual Forecasting and then test the downloaded code in SAS Studio. The documentation illustrates this using KUBECTL commands via a Linux shell. Because many Visual Forecasting users are more comfortable staying in the SAS tools rather than jumping to a Linux shell, this article demonstrates how to accomplish the same thing using the power of SAS Visual Analytics, SAS Model Studio, and SAS Studio.
2 Replies
100
Views
|
2 Replies
|
100
Views
| ||
3 Replies
142
Views
|
3 Replies
|
142
Views
| ||
2 Replies
129
Views
|
2 Replies
|
129
Views
| ||
by
1 Reply
132
Views
|
1 Reply
|
132
Views
| ||
by
2 Replies
116
Views
|
2 Replies
|
116
Views
| ||
5 Replies
677
Views
|
5 Replies
|
677
Views
| ||
3 Replies
181
Views
|
3 Replies
|
181
Views
| ||
1 Reply
181
Views
|
1 Reply
|
181
Views
| ||
5 Replies
231
Views
|
5 Replies
|
231
Views
| ||
2 Replies
133
Views
|
2 Replies
|
133
Views
| ||
by
2 Replies
98
Views
|
2 Replies
|
98
Views
| ||
by
14 Replies
500
Views
|
14 Replies
|
500
Views
| ||
1 Reply
122
Views
|
1 Reply
|
122
Views
| ||
3 Replies
239
Views
|
3 Replies
|
239
Views
| ||
4 Replies
173
Views
|
4 Replies
|
173
Views
|
What SAS Python Packages are Available and What Do They Do?
Premiering November 3, 11 am ET
Register NowSee the latest Forecasting and Econometrics articles!
Learn how to run multiple linear regression models with and without interactions, presented by SAS user Alex Chaplin.
Find more tutorials on the SAS Users YouTube channel.