BookmarkSubscribeRSS Feed
🔒 This topic is solved and locked. Need further help from the community? Please sign in and ask a new question.
Siddharth123
Obsidian | Level 7

Hi All,

I have the sas dataset like:

User Rate

A       4

A       4

A       5

A       5

B       2

B       2

B       3

I would like to output :

User Rate1  Rate2

A       4         5

B       2         3

Kindly advise.

SK

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions
Murray_Court
Quartz | Level 8

Proc SQL qould be good here.

data one;

input user1 $ rate;

datalines;

A 4

A 4

A 5

A 5

B 2

B 2

B 3

;

/* precautionary sort */

proc sort data=one;

by user1, rate;

run;

proc sql;

create table two as

select

max(rate) as rate1,

min(rate as rate2

from one

group by user1;

quit;

Should give desired output.


View solution in original post

5 REPLIES 5
LinusH
Tourmaline | Level 20

You could solve this with data step programming using SET - BY, and using first./last.-logic and explicit OUTPUT.

Data never sleeps
Murray_Court
Quartz | Level 8

Proc SQL qould be good here.

data one;

input user1 $ rate;

datalines;

A 4

A 4

A 5

A 5

B 2

B 2

B 3

;

/* precautionary sort */

proc sort data=one;

by user1, rate;

run;

proc sql;

create table two as

select

max(rate) as rate1,

min(rate as rate2

from one

group by user1;

quit;

Should give desired output.


Peter_C
Rhodochrosite | Level 12

Might one user have more than two rates? What then?

Should the result columns be in the order of the incoming data or ascending value? (as the original, very small, example demonstrates)

Greek
Obsidian | Level 7

Hello Siddharth!

I have been using SAS for few months now so I am not the most experienced user. Even though there must be a more efficient way, here is what I have for you... Does this work?

/*I arbitrarily added a few more values to test*/

data one;

input user1 $ rate;

datalines;

A 4

A 4

A 5

A 5

A 2

A 1

A 6

A 3

A 5

A 4

B 2

B 2

B 3

B 5

B 6

B 8

B 6

run;

/*Sort the data by rate so that there are no duplicate values on the same letter */

proc sort data=one nodup;

by rate;

run;

/*sort the data again by User1 to be able to transpose in the next step*/

proc sort data=one;

by user1;

run;

/*Transpose and create a new data set*/

proc transpose data=one out=transposed;

by user1;

run;

/*Print to check the results*/

proc print data=transposed;

run;

LarryWorley
Fluorite | Level 6

The approach proposed by Greek, using Proc Transpose, is the most generic way of handling this.  It will handle many conditions, such as the number of values and level of the values, that you will need to consider programmatically if using either data step or sql.

Also it is very efficient -- does its work in memory.

Larry

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!

What is Bayesian Analysis?

Learn the difference between classical and Bayesian statistical approaches and see a few PROC examples to perform Bayesian analysis in this video.

Find more tutorials on the SAS Users YouTube channel.

SAS Training: Just a Click Away

 Ready to level-up your skills? Choose your own adventure.

Browse our catalog!

Discussion stats
  • 5 replies
  • 1333 views
  • 6 likes
  • 6 in conversation