Hi All,
I require a small assistance from you guys regarding.
I would like to have my table name embedded with week of today and year of today.
I.e myfile102022
I tried everything like
Data myfile&d._&d1.;
%let d=week(today());
%let d1=year(today());
%put &d &d1;
run;
But the it isn't printing the values of d and d1 instead it is taking the values as is i.e
myfileweek(today())_year(today())
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance.
Macro statements like %LET and macro variables are resolved while the code is fetched for compiling/execution, so your code is equivalent to
%let d=week(today());
%let d1=year(today());
%put &d &d1;
Data myfile&d._&d1.;
run;
and that is the correct sequence for writing macro code.
You store the text "week(today())" in your macro variable d, and characters like parentheses are clearly not allowed in dataset names. The content of the macro variables is visible in your %PUT.
To evaluate data step functions while the %LET is executed, you need to wrap them in %SYSFUNC:
%let d=%sysfunc(week(%sysfunc(today()),z2.);
%let d1=%sysfunc(year(%sysfunc(today()));
I added the Z2. format to the first%SYSFUNC so that week 9 (09) comes before week 10.
And for better handling, use the correct hierarchical order in your dataset name:
data myfile&d1._&d.;
I see I missed parentheses. See this updated example:
%let d=%sysfunc(week(%sysfunc(today())),z2.);
%let d1=%sysfunc(year(%sysfunc(today())));
data myfile&d1._&d.;
set sashelp.class;
run;
which gets this log:
69 %let d=%sysfunc(week(%sysfunc(today())),z2.); 70 %let d1=%sysfunc(year(%sysfunc(today()))); 71 72 data myfile&d1._&d.; 73 set sashelp.class; 74 run; NOTE: There were 19 observations read from the data set SASHELP.CLASS. NOTE: The data set WORK.MYFILE2022_10 has 19 observations and 5 variables.
And yes, you can use macro variables in all SAS code, because the macro preprocessor works with the code text before it is sent to execute. So the macro variables will be resolved before the SQL code is sent to the SQL interpreter.
@Pandu2 wrote:
Hii,
In your code
%let d=%sysfunc(week(%sysfunc(today())),z2.).
I tried to get the prior week of it but couldn't figure out the best. Could you please help me on that.
Thanks
%let d=%sysfunc(week(%sysfunc(today())),z2.);
%put &=d;
%let d2=%sysfunc(week(%eval(%sysfunc(today())-7)),z2.);
%put &=d2;
@Pandu2 wrote:
Thankyou for your assistance. The week represents Fiscal week but not sure subtracting -7 give the same until it hits the next week. Please do check by giving tomorrow's date instead of today's.
Thanks.
The source value created by the today() function is a count of days since 1/1/1960.
If the week() function returns the correct value then substracting 7 days from the source value before applying the week() function will work.
Which values do you expect then for the dates from 2022-03-14 to 2022-03-21?
Subtract 7 from the date. To make (integer) calculations in macro language, use the %EVAL function:
%let d=%sysfunc(week(%eval(%sysfunc(today())-7)),z2.);
@Kurt_Bremser wrote:
Subtract 7 from the date. To make (integer) calculations in macro language, use the %EVAL function:
%let d=%sysfunc(week(%eval(%sysfunc(today())-7)),z2.);
Note that if the expression is being passed as an argument to a SAS function via %SYSFUNC() you don't need to use %EVAL() to do the calculations before hand.
338 %let x1=%sysfunc(week(%eval(%sysfunc(today())-7)),z2.); 339 %let x2=%sysfunc(week(%sysfunc(today())-7),z2.); 340 341 %put &=x1 &=x2; X1=10 X2=10
A NUMERIC argument that is.
346 %put |%sysfunc(putn(5+6,Z5.))|;
|00011|
347 %put |%sysfunc(putc(5+6,$5.-R))|;
| 5+6|
Registration is now open for SAS Innovate 2025 , our biggest and most exciting global event of the year! Join us in Orlando, FL, May 6-9.
Sign up by Dec. 31 to get the 2024 rate of just $495.
Register now!
Learn how use the CAT functions in SAS to join values from multiple variables into a single value.
Find more tutorials on the SAS Users YouTube channel.
Ready to level-up your skills? Choose your own adventure.