Hi all,
I create a table using a proc sql:
PROC SQL; CREATE TABLE A (B char(6) label = "BA"); QUIT;
For every rows, the column B is filled in with "PA".
Finally the column B of my table A has a length of 2.
I would like it to remain to 6 as I ask it to do...because in a next step I merge with another table which has more than 2 characters and otherwise it creates truncation problems.
Do you know how I could do it?
Thanks
Add a length statement.
PROC SQL;
CREATE TABLE A
(B char(6) label = "BA" length=8);
QUIT;
@FP12 wrote:
But why did you write 8? I want 6! ^^
Then change it to 6.
@FP12 wrote:
I tried it and the problem remains.
Show what you tried and what the 'problem remains' means. Explain in detail, preferably using the example/code we can run. It works in the demonstration code I presented so either you're not stating something that's important or doing something else that's changing it somewhere else.
The output here clearly shows the length is now 8.
SAS Output
Alphabetic List of Variables and Attributes | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
# | Variable | Type | Len | Label |
1 | B | Char | 8 | BA |
PROC SQL;
CREATE TABLE A
(B char(6) label = "BA" length=8);
QUIT;
proc contents data=a;
run;
You are obviously skipping something very important as there are no values for B shown. The empty data set created by the shown SQL does have a length of 6.
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