Hi: ODS LAYOUT and ODS REGION can be used with more than just PROC PRINT. I don't exactly understand what you mean by refer to the table. ODS LAYOUT and ODS REGION define areas in the output where the procedure will place the table. So in a sense, think of it like control statements. ODS LAYOUT and ODS REGION get specified first, to define an area in the output. Next, you have a procedure that's going to produce a table or graph and the destination will put the table or graph into the defined area. So the ODS LAYOUT and ODS REGION are controlling statements. If you want 2 areas, side by side, you'd define 1 row and 2 columns. If you want 2 areas side by side with 1 area underneath, then you'd define 2 rows, with 2 columns in the 1st row and 1 column in the 2nd row. In this case, you're not defining table rows, you're dividing the output area into areas or regions that will contain your procedure output. Take a look at the papers, I think it will make more sense then. Cynthia Here are some user group papers with examples: https://support.sas.com/resources/papers/proceedings10/216-2010.pdf and https://www.lexjansen.com/phuse/2019/dv/DV03.pdf and https://support.sas.com/resources/papers/proceedings15/SAS1836-2015.pdf.
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