In a stored process using a custom style is not to difficult:
ods html5 body=_webout(no_bottom_matter url=&_replay title= "yet another title") path=&_tmpcat cssStyle="path-to-css-file";
This does not work in SAS Studio, research lead me to http://support.sas.com/documentation/cdl/en/webeditorug/68828/HTML/default/viewer.htm#n0npxqhd54fc7z... explaining how to use a custom style. Unfortunately this does not work as expected. Expectation is, that the result tab contains, e.g. proc print, results formated with the information from my css file. The best result I had was an empty result tab and a well formatted html-file in WORK. Acceptable is a download/open link comparable to result tag in Enterprise Guide, when using explicit ods statements.
Any ideas?
Using SAS Studio 3.6 @ SAS BI Server.
_webout is for stored process
_htmlout is for results windows when using SAS Studio
ods html5(WEB) file=_HTMLOUT stylesheet=(URL="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/materialize/0.98.0/css/materialize.min.css");
proc print data=sashelp.class style={class="striped"};
id name / style={fontfamily="Roboto" fontsize=16};
var sex age height weight;
run;
Generate a separate output that has the link to the location where you wrote the HMTL file.
You might need to know how your webservers are configured to know how to coordinate the path used in the SAS code with the path used in the link.
_webout is for stored process
_htmlout is for results windows when using SAS Studio
ods html5(WEB) file=_HTMLOUT stylesheet=(URL="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/materialize/0.98.0/css/materialize.min.css");
proc print data=sashelp.class style={class="striped"};
id name / style={fontfamily="Roboto" fontsize=16};
var sex age height weight;
run;
Thanks, wasn't aware of _htmlout ![]()
Using cssStyle-options works also.
April 27 – 30 | Gaylord Texan | Grapevine, Texas
Walk in ready to learn. Walk out ready to deliver. This is the data and AI conference you can't afford to miss.
Register now and lock in 2025 pricing—just $495!
Get started using SAS Studio to write, run and debug your SAS programs.
Find more tutorials on the SAS Users YouTube channel.
Ready to level-up your skills? Choose your own adventure.