BookmarkSubscribeRSS Feed
thanikondharish
Calcite | Level 5

Name

Sex

Age

Height

Weight

Alfred

M

14

69

112.5

Alice

F

13

56.5

84

Barbara

F

13

65.3

98

Carol

F

14

62.8

102.5

Henry

M

14

63.5

102.5

James

M

12

57.3

.

Jane

F

12

59.8

.

Janet

F

15

62.5

112.5

Jeffrey

M

13

62.5

84

John

M

12

59

.

Joyce

F

11

51.3

50.5

Judy

F

14

64.3

90

Louise

F

12

56.3

.

Mary

F

15

66.5

112

Philip

M

16

72

150

Robert

M

12

64.8

.

Ronald

M

15

67

133

Thomas

M

11

57.5

85

William

M

15

66.5

112

in above data weight variable has some missings so we use locf method and fill up missing values and the same time assign dtype=locf like below table

 

new_weight

Name

Sex

Age

Height

Weight

dtype

112.5

Alfred

M

14

69

112.5

 

84

Alice

F

13

56.5

84

 

98

Barbara

F

13

65.3

98

 

102.5

Carol

F

14

62.8

102.5

 

102.5

Henry

M

14

63.5

102.5

 

102.5

James

M

12

57.3

.

locf

102.5

Jane

F

12

59.8

.

locf

112.5

Janet

F

15

62.5

112.5

 

84

Jeffrey

M

13

62.5

84

 

84

John

M

12

59

.

locf

50.5

Joyce

F

11

51.3

50.5

 

90

Judy

F

14

64.3

90

 

90

Louise

F

12

56.3

.

locf

112

Mary

F

15

66.5

112

 

150

Philip

M

16

72

150

 

150

Robert

M

12

64.8

.

locf

133

Ronald

M

15

67

133

 

85

Thomas

M

11

57.5

85

 

112

William

M

15

66.5

112

 

 

5 REPLIES 5
RW9
Diamond | Level 26 RW9
Diamond | Level 26

Please post test data in the form of a datastep and clearly describe what it is you are asking.  From what you have posted:

data want;
  set have;
  dtype="locf";
run;

Gets you the second table, although this isn't what you are wanting is it.  Maybe something like:

data want (drop=weight rename=(new_weight=weight));
   set have;
   retain new_weight;
   if weight ne . then new_weight=weight;
   else dtype="locf";
run;
     

Not tested as no test data.

thanikondharish
Calcite | Level 5
use then do
RW9
Diamond | Level 26 RW9
Diamond | Level 26

?

ballardw
Super User

Are you asking how to implement locf?

error_prone
Barite | Level 11

The paper http://www2.sas.com/proceedings/sugi28/099-28.pdf seems to contain a description on how to implement locf.

Ready to join fellow brilliant minds for the SAS Hackathon?

Build your skills. Make connections. Enjoy creative freedom. Maybe change the world. Registration is now open through August 30th. Visit the SAS Hackathon homepage.

Register today!
How to Concatenate Values

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.

Click image to register for webinarClick image to register for webinar

Classroom Training Available!

Select SAS Training centers are offering in-person courses. View upcoming courses for:

View all other training opportunities.

Discussion stats
  • 5 replies
  • 880 views
  • 0 likes
  • 4 in conversation