Book Image

Hands-On SAS for Data Analysis

By : Harish Gulati
Book Image

Hands-On SAS for Data Analysis

By: Harish Gulati

Overview of this book

SAS is one of the leading enterprise tools in the world today when it comes to data management and analysis. It enables the fast and easy processing of data and helps you gain valuable business insights for effective decision-making. This book will serve as a comprehensive guide that will prepare you for the SAS certification exam. After a quick overview of the SAS architecture and components, the book will take you through the different approaches to importing and reading data from different sources using SAS. You will then cover SAS Base and 4GL, understanding data management and analysis, along with exploring SAS functions for data manipulation and transformation. Next, you'll discover SQL procedures and get up to speed on creating and validating queries. In the concluding chapters, you'll learn all about data visualization, right from creating bar charts and sample geographic maps through to assigning patterns and formats. In addition to this, the book will focus on macro programming and its advanced aspects. By the end of this book, you will be well versed in SAS programming and have the skills you need to easily handle and manage your data-related problems in SAS.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: SAS Basics
4
Section 2: Merging, Optimizing, and Descriptive Statistics
7
Section 3: Advanced Programming
10
Section 4: SQL in SAS
13
Section 5: Data Visualization and Reporting

Resolving macro variables

We have looked at various examples of specifying and resolving macro variables throughout this book. Now, we will explore some specific instances where our current knowledge of macro variables isn't enough to overcome certain challenges.

Macro variable names within text

So far, the macro variables we have formed have had no prefix or suffix attached to them. Some macro variables, however, have had a period in front of them to segregate them from the library name, like so:

%Let Out = Class_;

Data &Out2013 &Out2019;
Set Class;

If Year EQ 2013 Then
Output &Out2013;
Else
Output &Out2019;
Run;

In a macro variable reference, the word scanner recognizes that a macro variable name...