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Thanks for the code! By the way, given the size of the simulated sample is 123- a number not that large- it can serve as a good example of one of my previous theoretical explanation to @TomHsiung. The bandwidth of 2.5 is a little bit small in that while its selection leads to a kernel PDF estimate that reveals the general trend of a normal one, the curve is troubled by zigzag lines, a sign of noise.
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For that 123 sample size, H for 1 to 12 looks like this:
Bart
_______________
Polish SAS Users Group: www.polsug.com and communities.sas.com/polsug
"SAS Packages: the way to share" at SGF2020 Proceedings (the latest version), GitHub Repository, and YouTube Video.
Hands-on-Workshop: "Share your code with SAS Packages"
"My First SAS Package: A How-To" at SGF2021 Proceedings
SAS Ballot Ideas: one: SPF in SAS, two, and three
SAS Documentation
Polish SAS Users Group: www.polsug.com and communities.sas.com/polsug
"SAS Packages: the way to share" at SGF2020 Proceedings (the latest version), GitHub Repository, and YouTube Video.
Hands-on-Workshop: "Share your code with SAS Packages"
"My First SAS Package: A How-To" at SGF2021 Proceedings
SAS Ballot Ideas: one: SPF in SAS, two, and three
SAS Documentation
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Thanks! What a wonderful presentation! I think you can expand the explanations of your code, make it a research paper and submit it to SAS conferences or statistical journals.
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