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Anita_n
Pyrite | Level 9

Hi all,

I need use this formular in SAS, but since am getting wrong results, please can anyone see if I interpretted anything wrong

 

NewVar= 0,56x√(TJC28)+0,28x√(SJC28)+0,70xlognat(BSG)+0,014xGG

 

I did interprete it like this in my SAS-Code:

NewVar=(0.56*sqrt(TJC28))+(0.28*sqrt(SJC28))+(0.70*log(BSG))+(0.014*GG);

 

Am not sure if natural log is calculated this way in SAS

 

Please, I will appreciate any help

17 REPLIES 17
ChrisNZ
Tourmaline | Level 20

The formula seems correct. Can you break down the formula components? Is this an Excel formula? Maybe some decimal digitss are hidden?

Anita_n
Pyrite | Level 9

how do you mean, to break the formula components. The given names are the variable names

ChrisNZ
Tourmaline | Level 20

Are the values of these the same on both sides:

(0.56*sqrt(TJC28))

(0.28*sqrt(SJC28))

(0.70*log(BSG))

(0.014*GG)

Anita_n
Pyrite | Level 9
@ChrisNZ: Yes the values are the same on both sides
Kurt_Bremser
Super User

With which system did you compare the result you get in SAS? And how did you code the formula in that reference system?

Run this code:

data _null_;
le = log(10);
put le=;
run;

and see if your reference system comes up with the same value for an argument of 10.

(BTW, the value is of course correct).

Anita_n
Pyrite | Level 9
@Kurt_Bremser: I know I don't have to get negative values for NewVar but I do have negative values. When I do the calculation in excel or with my calculator I get different results
Kurt_Bremser
Super User

Why wouldn't you have negative values? With small values for BSG, the log will be negative:

data have;
input tjc28 sjc28 bsg gg;
datalines;
.03 .03 .01 1
;

data check;
set have;
NewVar =
  0.56 * sqrt(TJC28)
  +
  0.28 * sqrt(SJC28)
  +
  0.70 * log(BSG)
  +
  0.014 * GG
;
run;

(a bsg value of zero would result in negative infinity)

PaigeMiller
Diamond | Level 26

From the SAS documentation:

 

LOG Function

Returns the natural (base e) logarithm.

 

This seems to answer your question.

--
Paige Miller
Sajid01
Meteorite | Level 14

Hello @Anita_n 

In SAS the function log(a) is actually natural log i.e. ln. The function log10(a) refers to log to the base 10.

Have a look at the following code to understand the use of the functions.
Please note i have assigned some numerical values to your variables to explain the concept.

 

data _NULL_;
TJC28=100;
SJC28=250;
BSG=500;
GG=1000;

NewVar_e=(0.56*sqrt(TJC28))+(0.28*sqrt(SJC28))+(0.70*log(BSG))+(0.014*GG);
NewVar_10=(0.56*sqrt(TJC28))+(0.28*sqrt(SJC28))+(0.70*log10(BSG))+(0.014*GG);
put NewVar_e=;
put NewVar_10=;
run;
In the log we see  

NewVar_e=28.377414393
NewVar_10=25.916467727
ballardw
Super User

Provide an full example of "wrong result", this means the values of all variables, the result you get and the value you compare it to that tells you the SAS result is "wrong".

Sajid01
Meteorite | Level 14

Thanks @ballardw for reading the post commenting that everything is wrong.
Please help me understand where I am wrong.
Learning is a life long exercise and we learn many things in course of time.
My post showed the following
1. Log() function gives natural log (ln)
2. log10() gives log to the base 10
3.I took an example using the formula in the first post by @Anita_n 
The idea was to show the difference in the output of the two functions.

Lastly there are many different  ways of doing the same thing,
and many different ways of communicating the same thing.
The more importing thing is to appreciate that somebody responded to a question.

ballardw
Super User

@Sajid01 wrote:

Thanks @ballardw for reading the post commenting that everything is wrong.
Please help me understand where I am wrong.
Learning is a life long exercise and we learn many things in course of time.
My post showed the following
1. Log() function gives natural log (ln)
2. log10() gives log to the base 10
3.I took an example using the formula in the first post by @Anita_n 
The idea was to show the difference in the output of the two functions.

Lastly there are many different  ways of doing the same thing,
and many different ways of communicating the same thing.
The more importing thing is to appreciate that somebody responded to a question.


I was hoping to see the actual values of some variables and the results that @Anita_n is using and seeing.

ghosh
Barite | Level 11

In Excel natural log is ln.  it's different than log (which is base 10)

	log(10)	ln(10)
10	1.0000000	2.3025851
Anita_n
Pyrite | Level 9

Hello all, 

thanks for your responses and the ideas. Here are some data samples am using and the corresponding results I got in SAS compared to excel:

 

TJC28 SJC28 CRP GG SAS: NewVar Excel Results
3 3 0,09 18 0,02136075 0,97489243
0 0 0,7 20 0,03032754 0,17156863
0 0 0,6 30 0,06242206 0,26470588
0 0 1 5 0,07 0,07
0 0 0,02 0 -2,7384161 -1,189279
0 0 0,02 10 -2,5984161 -1,049279
0 0 0,023 5 -2,5705827 -1,0767905
0 0 0,031 5 -2,3616377 -0,9860468

 

This is the formula: 0,56x√(TJC28)+0,28x√(SJC28)+0,70xlognat(CRP)+0,014xGG

and this was how I interpretted it in SAS

NewVar=(0.56*sqrt(TJC28))+(0.28*sqrt(SJC28))+(0.70*log(CRP))+(0.014*GG);

You can see that the results I get from SAS is different from what I get from SAS. My caculator gives the same results like excel. Thanks for any solution

 

 

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