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Author SHA1 Message Date
yabwon
9b6a567298 SAS Packages Framework, version 20201101
**SAS Packages Framework**, version 20201101:
- In the `%generatePackage()` macro two new parameters `sasexe=` and `sascfgfile=` pointing the location of the SAS binary and the config file were added.
  - The first points location of a *directory* where the SAS binary is located, if null (the default) then the `!SASROOT` is used.
  - The second points location of a *file* with testing session configuration parameters, if null (the default) then no config file is pointed during the SAS invocation, if set to `DEF` then the `!SASROOT/sasv9.cfg` is used.
- Documentation updated.

The SAS Packages Framework available packages:
- `SQLinDS` (version 2.2)
- `macroArray` (version 0.7)
  - The `%mcHashTable()` macro was added in the package.
- `DFA` (version 0.2)
- `BasePlus` (version 0.8)
  - New macros added:`%dedupListS()`, `%dedupListC()`, `%dedupListP()`, `%dedupListX()`, and `%QdedupListX()`
- `dynMacroArray` (version 0.2)

New package added:
- MacroCore[version 1], a macro library for SAS application developers. Over 100 macros for Base SAS, metadata, and Viya. Provided by the SASjs framework (`https://sasjs.io/`).
2020-11-01 15:57:34 +01:00
Bart Jablonski
2a773d0994 MacroCore package added to the repository 2020-10-29 23:17:48 +01:00
Bart Jablonski
c716bf5789 MacroCore package added to the repository 2020-10-29 22:53:56 +01:00
Bart Jablonski
40e8a0806e MacroCore package added to the repository 2020-10-29 22:53:11 +01:00
Bart Jablonski
d2c445e395 Merge pull request #2 from allanbowe/macrocore
feat: adding the SASjs Macro Core library to the SAS_PACKAGES framework
2020-10-29 22:44:24 +01:00
370bfc52d5 feat: adding the SASjs Macro Core library to the SAS_PACKAGES framework 2020-10-29 22:38:48 +01:00
Bart Jablonski
1b036c94f0 Update README.md 2020-10-27 13:11:44 +01:00
Bart Jablonski
fdb8e8b47c Update README.md 2020-10-27 13:11:23 +01:00
Bart Jablonski
c1b9344e86 Update README.md 2020-10-27 13:09:50 +01:00
yabwon
4eaa1e63ec macroArray, version 0.7:
macroArray, version 0.7:

The `%mcHashTable()` macro was added in the package.
It is designed to facilitate the idea of a "macro hash table"
concept, i.e. *a list of macrovariables with common prefix
and suffixes generated as a hash digest* which allows
to use values other than integers as indexes.
The `%mcHashTable()` macro allows to generate other macros
which behaves like hash tables or dictionaries.
2020-10-23 10:34:20 +02:00
yabwon
2730a9438f BasePlus, version 0.8
BasePlus, version 0.8
- New macros added:`%dedupListS()`, `%dedupListC()`, `%dedupListP()`, `%dedupListX()`, and `%QdedupListX()`
2020-10-20 21:57:44 +02:00
yabwon
975a48e242 SAS Packages Framework, version 20201018
**SAS Packages Framework**, version 20201018:
- In the `%generatePackage()` macro new parameter `testResults=` pointing the location where tests results should be stored was added.
- Datasets provided by the `data` type can be reloaded with help of the `lazyData=` parameter.
- The way the dataset help is displayed was improved.
- In the testing process the note about quoted string length was turned off.
- Tests results (i.e. `log` and `lst` files) can be redirected to a different location and are stored in directories named: `test_packagename_yyyymmddthhmmss`.
- Documentation updated.

Packages recompiled with the new version of the SAS Packages Framework:
- SQLinDS (version 2.2)
- macroArray (version 0.6)
- DFA (version 0.2)
- BasePlus (version 0.7)
- dynMacroArray (version 0.2)
2020-10-18 22:21:22 +02:00
Bart Jablonski
ba4a49f95f SAS Packages Framework, version 20201018
**SAS Packages Framework**, version 20201018:
- In the `%generatePackage()` macro new parameter `testResults=` pointing the location where tests results should be stored was added.
- Datasets provided by the `data` type can be reloaded with help of the `lazyData=` parameter.
- The way the dataset help is displayed was improved.
- In the testing process the note about quoted string length was turned off.
- Tests results (i.e. `log` and `lst` files) can be redirected to a different location and are stored in directories named: `test_packagename_yyyymmddthhmmss`.
- Documentation updated.

Packages recompiled with the new version of the SAS Packages Framework:
- SQLinDS (version 2.2)
- macroArray (version 0.6)
- DFA (version 0.2)
- BasePlus (version 0.7)
- dynMacroArray (version 0.2)
2020-10-18 22:16:22 +02:00
yabwon
e00353e693 SAS Packages Framework, version 20201018
**SAS Packages Framework**, version 20201018:
- In the `%generatePackage()` macro new parameter `testResults=` pointing the location where tests results should be stored was added.
- Datasets provided by the `data` type can be reloaded with help of the `lazyData=` parameter.
- The way the dataset help is displayed was improved.
- In the testing process the note about quoted string length was turned off.
- Tests results (i.e. `log` and `lst` files) can be redirected to a different location and are stored in directories named: `test_packagename_yyyymmddthhmmss`.
- Documentation updated.

Packages recompiled with the new version of the SAS Packages Framework:
- SQLinDS (version 2.2)
- macroArray (version 0.6)
- DFA (version 0.2)
- BasePlus (version 0.7)
- dynMacroArray (version 0.2)
2020-10-18 22:15:16 +02:00
yabwon
7c1d58c165 macroArray package, version 0.6
macroArray package, version 0.6:

New feature of the `%array()` macro. If the `macarray` parameter of the `%array()` macro is set to `M` then for a given array name the macro symbols table is scanned for macrovariables with prefix like the array name and numeric suffixes. Then the minimum and the maximum index is determined and all not existing global macrovariables are created and a macro is generated in the same way as it is generated for the `Y` value.

Documentation updated.
2020-10-17 19:01:31 +02:00
yabwon
02f71de424 SQLinDS, source files updated
SQLinDS, source files updated
2020-10-14 16:33:07 +02:00
yabwon
bfdcd238ec SAS Packages Framework, version 20201014
**SAS Packages Framework**, version 20201014:
- Small change in displaying help information in the log.

Packages recompiled with new version of SAS Packages Framework:
- `SQLinDS` (version 2.2)
- `macroArray` (version 0.5)
- `DFA` (version 0.2)
- `BasePlus` (version 0.7)
- `dynMacroArray` (version 0.2)
2020-10-14 15:25:37 +02:00
yabwon
252c15b1c3 SAS Packages Framework, version 20201014
**SAS Packages Framework**, version 20201014:
- Small change in displaying help information in the log.

Packages recompiled with new version of SAS Packages Framework:
- `SQLinDS` (version 2.2)
- `macroArray` (version 0.5)
- `DFA` (version 0.2)
- `BasePlus` (version 0.7)
- `dynMacroArray` (version 0.2)
2020-10-14 15:06:09 +02:00
yabwon
a77e99adbe SAS Packages Framework, version 20201010
**SAS Packages Framework**, version 20201010:
- Improvement in testing facility for the framework.
- Change in SAS components testing, missing component issues a *warning* instead of *error*.
- Documentation updated, `SPFinit.md` file added.
- Minor bug fixes.

Packages recompiled with new version of SAS Packages Framework:
- `SQLinDS` (version 2.2)
- `macroArray` (version 0.5)
- `DFA` (version 0.2)
- `BasePlus` (version 0.7)
- documentation updated
- new macro `%symdelGlobal()` added
- `dynMacroArray` (version 0.2)
2020-10-11 21:18:40 +02:00
yabwon
7231049666 SAS Packages Framework, version 20201010
**SAS Packages Framework**, version 20201010:
- Improvement in testing facility for the framework.
- Change in SAS components testing, missing component issues a *warning* instead of *error*.
- Documentation updated, `SPFinit.md` file added.
- Minor bug fixes.

Packages recompiled with new version of SAS Packages Framework:
- `SQLinDS` (version 2.2)
- `macroArray` (version 0.5)
- `DFA` (version 0.2)
- `BasePlus` (version 0.7)
  - documentation updated
  - new macro `%symdelGlobal()` added
- `dynMacroArray` (version 0.2)
2020-10-11 13:12:47 +02:00
Bart Jablonski
2f743475f6 SAS Packages Framework, version 20201010
**SAS Packages Framework**, version 20201010:
- Improvement in testing facility for the framework.
- Change in SAS components testing, missing component issues a *warning* instead of *error*.
- Documentation updated, `SPFinit.md` file added.
- Minor bug fixes.

Packages recompiled with new version of SAS Packages Framework:
- `SQLinDS` (version 2.2)
- `macroArray` (version 0.5)
- `DFA` (version 0.2)
- `BasePlus` (version 0.7)
  - documentation updated
  - new macro `%symdelGlobal()` added
- `dynMacroArray` (version 0.2)
2020-10-11 12:33:11 +02:00
yabwon
cb59027079 Merge pull request #1 from allanbowe/patch-1
Update README.md
2020-10-10 20:05:12 +02:00
Allan Bowe
a93881f5d2 Update README.md 2020-10-10 19:46:29 +02:00
yabwon
64e7dafa72 SAS Packages Framework, version 20201010
**SAS Packages Framework**, version 20201010:
- Improvement in testing facility for the framework.
- Change in SAS components testing, missing component issues a *warning* instead of *error*.
- Documentation updated, `SPFinit.md` file added.
- Minor bug fixes.

Packages recompiled with new version of SAS Packages Framework:
- `SQLinDS` (version 2.2)
- `macroArray` (version 0.5)
- `DFA` (version 0.2)
- `BasePlus` (version 0.7)
  - documentation updated
  - new macro `%symdelGlobal()` added
- `dynMacroArray` (version 0.2)
2020-10-10 19:34:58 +02:00
23 changed files with 1420 additions and 346 deletions

View File

@@ -6,15 +6,16 @@ A **SAS package** is an automatically generated, single, stand alone *zip* file
The *purpose of a package* is to be a simple, and easy to access, code sharing medium, which will allow: on the one hand, to separate the code complex dependencies created by the developer from the user experience with the final product and, on the other hand, reduce developer's and user's unnecessary frustration related to a remote deployment process.
In this repository we are presenting the **SAS Packages Framework** which allows to develop and use SAS packages. The latest version of SPF is **`20201010`**.
In this repository we are presenting the **SAS Packages Framework** which allows to develop and use SAS packages. The latest version of SPF is **`20201101`**.
To get started with SAS Packages try this [**`Getting Started with SAS Packages`**](https://github.com/yabwon/SAS_PACKAGES/blob/master/SPF/Documentation/Getting_Started_with_SAS_Packages.pdf "Getting Started with SAS Packages") presentation (see the `./SPF/Documentation` directory).
The documentation and more advance reading would be the [**`SAS(r) packages - the way to share (a how to)- Paper 4725-2020 - extended.pdf`**](https://github.com/yabwon/SAS_PACKAGES/blob/master/SPF/Documentation/SAS(r)%20packages%20-%20the%20way%20to%20share%20(a%20how%20to)-%20Paper%204725-2020%20-%20extended.pdf "SAS packages - the way to share") article (see the `./SPF/Documentation` directory).
**General overview video:**
- [SAS Global Forum 2020 V.E.](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qCkb-bx0Dv8&t=0s "SGF2020")
- [Sasensei Internationa Dojo](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BFhdUBQgjYQ&t=0s "SID no. 1")
- [SAS Global Forum 2020 V.E.](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qCkb-bx0Dv8&t=0s "SGF2020") (April 2020)
- [Sasensei International Dojo](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BFhdUBQgjYQ&t=0s "SID no. 1") (April 2020)
- [SAS dla Administratorów i Praktyków 2020](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mXuep2k48Z8&feature=youtu.be&t=0s "SASAiP2020") (October 2020, in Polish)
### The User:
To use a package:
@@ -62,6 +63,14 @@ To create your own package:
**Update**\[July 30th, 2020\]**:** All components of SAS Packages Framework are now in one file `SPFinit.sas` (located in the `./SPF` directory). Documentation moved to `./SPF/Documentation` directory. Packages zip files moved to `./packages` directory.
## Where the SAS Packages Framework is used:
This is a list of locations where the SAS Packages Framework is used. If you want to share that you are using SPF let me know and I'll update the list.
The List:
- Europe
- Poland
- Warsaw
## Available packages:
Currently the following packages are available (see the `./packages` directory):
@@ -71,16 +80,22 @@ Currently the following packages are available (see the `./packages` directory):
set %SQL(select * from sashelp.class order by age);
run;
```
SHA256 digest for SQLinDS: D76B85EFF129678B45233FB397A2BDB8D23F234013BD821D55141CA18DD5589E
SHA256 digest for SQLinDS: 135DC50C0412B8CEAF6D5349B8A203C0ADB23D4F5C2680B6A35FD2E5482B6C49
[Documentation for SQLinDS](https://github.com/yabwon/SAS_PACKAGES/blob/master/packages/sqlinds.md "Documentation for SQLinDS")
- **MacroCore**\[1\], a macro library for SAS application developers. Over 100 macros for Base SAS, metadata, and Viya. Provided by the [SASjs framework](https://sasjs.io "SASjs framework").
SHA256 digest for MacroCore: A23C29529F3CE7D0C8BEE9545C5D22D5B5594907547374A5135B8E5A48D7687B
[Documentation for MacroCore](https://core.sasjs.io "Documentation for MacroCore")
- **DFA** (Dynamic Function Arrays)\[0.2\], contains set of macros and FCMP functions which implement: a dynamically allocated array, a stack, a fifo queue, an ordered stack, and a priority queue, run `%helpPackage(DFA,createDFArray)` to find examples.
SHA256 digest for DFA: 43AE8BB0FC7D2121AABDD8DB8AD2C3F226C7D2699CAACC171FCB72B75D9141FA
SHA256 digest for DFA: E67A0863992722A5F535F56E14EF8D19A55F74FB374447BF11B5ED74029C29CB
- **macroArray**\[0.5\], implementation of an array concept in a macrolanguage, e.g.
- **macroArray**\[0.7\], implementation of an array concept in a macrolanguage, e.g.
```
%array(ABC[17] (111:127), macarray=Y);
@@ -99,12 +114,12 @@ SHA256 digest for DFA: 43AE8BB0FC7D2121AABDD8DB8AD2C3F226C7D2699CAACC171FCB72B75
which = 1:H:2
);
```
SHA256 digest for macroArray: 085A0F3D544EAF01378BB6C6B4F429123F8BFEEFC76013D1B05DFADFEE3FA661
SHA256 digest for macroArray: 75056F508E96296DC50096BBB054C58334DB913AD37885958099EDCE0C330CB2
[Documentation for macroArray](https://github.com/yabwon/SAS_PACKAGES/blob/master/packages/macroarray.md "Documentation for macroArray")
- **BasePlus**\[0.7\] adds a bunch of functionalities I am missing in BASE SAS, such as:
- **BasePlus**\[0.8\] adds a bunch of functionalities I am missing in BASE SAS, such as:
```
call arrMissToRight(myArray);
call arrFillMiss(17, myArray);
@@ -118,12 +133,12 @@ format x bool.;
%put %getVars(sashelp.class, pattern = ght$, sep = +, varRange = _numeric_);
```
SHA256 digest for BasePlus: 54232DA5E253EB58E49A09DD0DF244F433B61983D921E27F2E4FFB1EA73A5C6D
SHA256 digest for BasePlus: 9549378E5F81DA4DC421C366DF006D270261852336CE3DCD88FF8E2A759938C8
[Documentation for BasePlus](https://github.com/yabwon/SAS_PACKAGES/blob/master/packages/baseplus.md "Documentation for BasePlus")
- **dynMacroArray**\[0.2\], set of macros (wrappers for a hash table) emulating dynamic array in the data step (macro predecessor of DFA)
SHA256 digest for dynMacroArray: 281D9493564A8185B858D9525AA7D9D5343E42414AAB1D8A00AE85AB80882661
SHA256 digest for dynMacroArray: 694AACE925B7F4E149C3B90383F56370ED76233D8F5040713D66C1F3A4E414FE
### ======

View File

@@ -1,8 +1,43 @@
## This is short help information for the `installPackage` macro
- [SAS PAckages Framework help](#helpinfo)
* [the `installPackage` macro](#installpackage)
* [the `helpPackage` macro](#helppackage)
* [the `loadPackage` macro](#loadpackage)
* [the `loadPackageS` macro](#loadpackages)
* [the `unloadPackage` macro](#unloadpackage)
* [the `listPackages` macro](#listpackages)
* [the `verifyPackage` macro](#verifypackage)
* [the `generatePackage` macro](#generatepackage)
* [Some more examples](#some-more-examples)
---
## This is short SAS PAckages Framework help information <a name="helpinfo"></a>
A **SAS package** is an automatically generated, single, stand alone *zip* file containing organised and ordered code structures, created by the developer and extended with additional automatically generated "driving" files (i.e. description, metadata, load, unload, and help files).
The *purpose of a package* is to be a simple, and easy to access, code sharing medium, which will allow: on the one hand, to separate the code complex dependencies created by the developer from the user experience with the final product and, on the other hand, reduce developer's and user's unnecessary frustration related to a remote deployment process.
In this repository we are presenting the **SAS Packages Framework** which allows to develop and use SAS packages. The latest version of SPF is **`20201101`**.
**To get started with SAS Packages** try this [**`Getting Started with SAS Packages`**](https://github.com/yabwon/SAS_PACKAGES/blob/master/SPF/Documentation/Getting_Started_with_SAS_Packages.pdf "Getting Started with SAS Packages") presentation (see the `./SPF/Documentation` directory).
**The documentation and more advance reading** would be the [**`SAS(r) packages - the way to share (a how to)- Paper 4725-2020 - extended.pdf`**](https://github.com/yabwon/SAS_PACKAGES/blob/master/SPF/Documentation/SAS(r)%20packages%20-%20the%20way%20to%20share%20(a%20how%20to)-%20Paper%204725-2020%20-%20extended.pdf "SAS packages - the way to share") article (see the `./SPF/Documentation` directory).
*Note:* Filenames references `packages` and `package` are reserved keywords.
The first one should be used to point local folder with packages and the framework.
The second is used internally by macros.
After assigning the directory do not change them when using the SPF since it may affect stability of the framework.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
## This is short help information for the `installPackage` macro <a name="installpackage"></a>
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Macro to install SAS packages, version `20201010`
Macro to install SAS packages, version `20201101`
A SAS package is a zip file containing a group
of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating
@@ -24,12 +59,9 @@
If the package name is *SPFinit* or *SASPackagesFramework*
then the framework itself is downloaded.
- `sourcePath=` Location of the package, e.g. "www.some.web.page/"
Mind the "/" at the end of the path!
Current default location for packages is:
`https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yabwon/SAS_PACKAGES/master/packages/`
Current default location for the framework is:
`https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yabwon/SAS_PACKAGES/master/SPF/`
- `sourcePath=` Location of the package, e.g. "www.some.web.page/" (mind the "/" at the end of the path!) <br>
Current default location for packages is: <br> `https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yabwon/SAS_PACKAGES/master/packages/` <br>
Current default location for the framework is: <br> `https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yabwon/SAS_PACKAGES/master/SPF/`
- `replace=` With default value of `1` it causes existing package file
to be replaceed by new downloaded file.
@@ -56,13 +88,13 @@ filename packages "C:/SAS_PACKAGES"; %* setup a directory for packages;
%helpPackage(SQLinDS) %* get help about the package;
%loadPackage(SQLinDS) %* load the package content into the SAS session;
%unloadPackage(SQLinDS) %* unload the package content from the SAS session;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
## This is short help information for the `helpPackage` macro
## This is short help information for the `helpPackage` macro <a name="helppackage"></a>
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Macro to get help about SAS packages, version `20201010`
Macro to get help about SAS packages, version `20201101`
A SAS package is a zip file containing a group
of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating
@@ -129,10 +161,10 @@ filename packages "C:/SAS_PACKAGES"; %* setup a directory for packages;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
## This is short help information for the `loadPackage` macro
## This is short help information for the `loadPackage` macro <a name="loadpackage"></a>
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Macro to *load* SAS packages, version `20201010`
Macro to *load* SAS packages, version `20201101`
A SAS package is a zip file containing a group
of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating
@@ -199,13 +231,13 @@ filename packages "C:/SAS_PACKAGES"; %* setup a directory for packages;
%helpPackage(SQLinDS) %* get help about the package;
%loadPackage(SQLinDS) %* load the package content into the SAS session;
%unloadPackage(SQLinDS) %* unload the package content from the SAS session;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
## This is short help information for the `loadPackageS` macro
## This is short help information for the `loadPackageS` macro <a name="loadpackages"></a>
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Macro wrapper for the loadPackage macro, version `20201010`
Macro wrapper for the loadPackage macro, version `20201101`
A SAS package is a zip file containing a group
of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating
@@ -251,10 +283,10 @@ filename packages "C:/SAS_PACKAGES"; %* setup a directory for packages;
## This is short help information for the `unloadPackage` macro
## This is short help information for the `unloadPackage` macro <a name="unloadpackage"></a>
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Macro to unload SAS packages, version `20201010`
Macro to unload SAS packages, version `20201101`
A SAS package is a zip file containing a group
of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating
@@ -313,13 +345,13 @@ filename packages "C:/SAS_PACKAGES"; %* setup a directory for packages;
%helpPackage(SQLinDS) %* get help about the package;
%loadPackage(SQLinDS) %* load the package content into the SAS session;
%unloadPackage(SQLinDS) %* unload the package content from the SAS session;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
## This is short help information for the `listPackages` macro
## This is short help information for the `listPackages` macro <a name="listpackages"></a>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Macro to list available SAS packages, version `20201010`
Macro to list available SAS packages, version `20201101`
A SAS package is a zip file containing a group
of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating
@@ -354,13 +386,13 @@ filename packages "C:/SAS_PACKAGES"; %* setup a directory for packages;
%include packages(SPFinit.sas); %* enable the framework;
%listPackages() %* list available packages;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
### This is short help information for the `verifyPackage` macro
## This is short help information for the `verifyPackage` macro <a name="verifypackage"></a>
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Macro to verify SAS package with it hash digest, version `20201010`
Macro to verify SAS package with it hash digest, version `20201101`
A SAS package is a zip file containing a group
of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating
@@ -410,10 +442,10 @@ filename packages "C:/SAS_PACKAGES"; %* set-up a directory for packages;
hash=HDA478ANJ3HKHRY327FGE88HF89VH89HFFFV73GCV98RF390VB4)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
## This is short help information for the `generatePackage` macro
## This is short help information for the `generatePackage` macro <a name="generatepackage"></a>
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Macro to generate SAS packages, version `20201010`
Macro to generate SAS packages, version `20201101`
A SAS package is a zip file containing a group
of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating
@@ -437,10 +469,242 @@ filename packages "C:/SAS_PACKAGES"; %* set-up a directory for packages;
`%generatePackage(filesLocation=/path/to/packagename)`
If empty displays this help information.
Testing parameters:
- `testPackage=` Indicator if tests should be executed.
Default value: `Y`, means "execute tests"
- `packages=` Location of other packages for testing
if there are dependencies in loading the package.
- `testResults=` Location where tests results should be stored,
if null (the default) then the session WORK is used.
- `sasexe=` Location of a DIRECTORY where the SAS binary is located,
if null (the default) then the `!SASROOT` is used.
- `sascfgfile=` Location of a FILE with testing session configuration
parameters, if null (the default) then no config file
is pointed during the SAS invocation,
if set to `DEF` then the `!SASROOT/sasv9.cfg` is used.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Locate all files with code in base folder, i.e. at `filesLocation` directory.
Remember to prepare the `description.sas` file for you package.
The colon (:) is a field separator and is restricted
in lines of the header part.
The file should contain the following obligatory information:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
/*>> **HEADER** <<*/
Type: Package
Package: PackageName
Title: A title/brief info for log note about your package.
Version: X.Y
Author: Firstname1 Lastname1 (xxxxxx1@yyyyy.com), Firstname2 Lastname2 (xxxxxx2@yyyyy.com)
Maintainer: Firstname Lastname (xxxxxx@yyyyy.com)
License: MIT
Encoding: UTF8
Required: "Base SAS Software" :%*optional, COMMA separated, QUOTED list, names of required SAS products, values must be like from proc setinit;run; output *;
ReqPackages: "macroArray (0.1)", "DFA (0.1)" :%*optional, COMMA separated, QUOTED list, names of required packages *;
/*>> **DESCRIPTION** <<*/
/*>> All the text below will be used in help <<*/
DESCRIPTION START:
Xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx xxxxxx xxxxxxxx xxxxxxxx. Xxxxxxx
xxxx xxxxxxxxxxxx xx xxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxx. Xxxxxxx xxx
xxxx xxxxxx. Xxxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxx.
DESCRIPTION END:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Name of the `type` of folder and `files.sas` inside must be in the _low_ case letters.
If order of loading is important, the sequential number
can be used to order multiple types in the way you wish.
The "tree structure" of the folder could be for example as follows:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
<packageName>
..
|
+-000_libname [one file one libname]
| |
| +-abc.sas [a file with a code creating libname ABC]
|
+-001_macro [one file one macro]
| |
| +-hij.sas [a file with a code creating macro HIJ]
| |
| +-klm.sas [a file with a code creating macro KLM]
|
+-002_function [one file one function,
| | option OUTLIB= should be: work.&packageName.fcmp.package
| | option INLIB= should be: work.&packageName.fcmp
| | (both literally with macrovariable name and "fcmp" sufix)]
| |
| +-efg.sas [a file with a code creating function EFG, _with_ "Proc FCMP" header]
|
+-003_functions [mind the S at the end!, one file one function,
| | only plain code of the function, without "Proc FCMP" header]
| |
| +-ijk.sas [a file with a code creating function EFG, _without_ "Proc FCMP" header]
|
+-004_format [one file one format,
| | option LIB= should be: work.&packageName.format
| | (literally with macrovariable name and "format" sufix)]
| |
| +-efg.sas [a file with a code creating format EFG and informat EFG]
|
+-005_data [one file one dataset]
| |
| +-abc.efg.sas [a file with a code creating dataset EFG in library ABC]
|
+-006_exec [so called "free code", content of the files will be printed
| | to the log before execution]
| |
| +-<no file, in this case folder may be skipped>
|
+-007_format [if your codes depend each other you can order them in folders,
| | e.g. code from 003_... will be executed before 006_...]
| |
| +-abc.sas [a file with a code creating format ABC,
| used in the definition of the format EFG]
+-008_function
| |
| +-<no file, in this case folder may be skipped>
|
|
+-009_lazydata [one file one dataset]
| |
| +-klm.sas [a file with a code creating dataset klm in library work
| it will be created only if user request it by using:
| %loadPackage(packagename, lazyData=klm)
| multiple elements separated by space are allowed
| an asterisk(*) means "load all data"]
|
+-010_imlmodule [one file one IML module,
| | only plain code of the module, without "Proc IML" header]
| |
| +-abc.sas [a file with a code creating IML module ABC, _without_ "Proc IML" header]
|
+-<sequential number>_<type [in lower case]>
|
+-00n_clean [if you need to clean something up after exec file execution,
| | content of the files will be printed to the log before execution]
| |
| +-<no file, in this case folder may be skipped>
|
+-...
|
+-999_test [tests executed during package generation, XCMD options must be turned-on]
| |
| +-test1.sas [a file with a code for test1]
| |
| +-test2.sas [a file with a code for test2]
|
+-...
...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
## Some more examples <a name="some-more-examples"></a> #############################################################
### Example 1. ###################################################################
Enabling the SAS Package Framework
and loading the SQLinDS package from the local directory.
Assume that the `SPFinit.sas` file and the SQLinDS
package (sqlinds.zip file) are located in
the "C:/SAS_PACKAGES/" folder.
Run the following code in your SAS session:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
filename packages "C:/SAS_PACKAGES"; %* setup a directory for packages;
%include packages(SPFinit.sas); %* enable the framework;
%helpPackage(SQLinDS) %* get help about the package;
%loadPackage(SQLinDS) %* load the package content into the SAS session;
%unloadPackage(SQLinDS) %* unload the package content from the SAS session;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
### Example 2. ###################################################################
Enabling the SAS Package Framework
from the local directory and installing & loading
the SQLinDS package from the Internet.
Assume that the `SPFinit.sas` file
is located in the "C:/SAS_PACKAGES/" folder.
Run the following code in your SAS session:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
filename packages "C:/SAS_PACKAGES"; %* setup a directory for packages;
%include packages(SPFinit.sas); %* enable the framework;
%installPackage(SQLinDS) %* install the package from the Internet;
%helpPackage(SQLinDS) %* get help about the package;
%loadPackage(SQLinDS) %* load the package content into the SAS session;
%unloadPackage(SQLinDS) %* unload the package content from the SAS session;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
### Example 3. ###################################################################
Enabling the SAS Package Framework
and installing & loading the SQLinDS package
from the Internet.
Run the following code in your SAS session:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
filename packages "%sysfunc(pathname(work))"; %* setup WORK as a temporary directory for packages;
filename spfinit url "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/yabwon/SAS_PACKAGES/master/SPFinit.sas";
%include spfinit; %* enable the framework;
%installPackage(SQLinDS) %* install the package from the Internet;
%helpPackage(SQLinDS) %* get help about the package;
%loadPackage(SQLinDS) %* load the package content into the SAS session;
%unloadPackage(SQLinDS) %* unload the package content from the SAS session;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
### Example 4. ###################################################################
Assume that the `SPFinit.sas` file and the SQLinDS package (`sqlinds.zip` file)
are located in the "C:/SAS_PACKAGES/" folder.
In case when user SAS session does not support ZIP fileref
the following solution could be used.
Unzip the `packagename.zip` content into the `packagename.disk` folder
and run macros with the following options: ;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%loadPackage(packageName,zip=disk,options=)
%helpPackage(packageName,,zip=disk,options=) %* mind the double comma!! ;
%unloadPackage(packageName,zip=disk,options=)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
### Example 5. ###################################################################
Enabling the SAS Package Framework from the local directory
and installing the SQLinDS package from the Internet.
Assume that the `SPFinit.sas` file is located in
the "C:/SAS_PACKAGES/" folder.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
filename packages "C:/SAS_PACKAGES"; %* setup a directory for packages;
%include packages(SPFinit.sas); %* enable the framework;
%installPackage(SQLinDS); %* install package;
%installPackage(SQLinDS); %* overwrite already installed package;
%installPackage(SQLinDS,replace=0); %* prevent overwrite installed package;
%installPackage(NotExistingPackage); %* handling with not existing package;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

View File

@@ -42,7 +42,7 @@
- to unload, or
- to generate SAS packages.
Version 20201010.
Version 20201101.
See examples below.
A SAS package is a zip file containing a group of files
@@ -81,7 +81,7 @@
*/
)/secure
/*** HELP END ***/
des = 'Macro to load SAS package, version 20201010. Run %loadPackage() for help info.'
des = 'Macro to load SAS package, version 20201101. Run %loadPackage() for help info.'
;
%if (%superq(packageName) = ) OR (%qupcase(&packageName.) = HELP) %then
%do;
@@ -96,7 +96,7 @@ des = 'Macro to load SAS package, version 20201010. Run %loadPackage() for help
%put ### This is short help information for the `loadPackage` macro #;
%put #-------------------------------------------------------------------------------#;
%put # #;
%put # Macro to *load* SAS packages, version `20201010` #;
%put # Macro to *load* SAS packages, version `20201101` #;
%put # #;
%put # A SAS package is a zip file containing a group #;
%put # of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating #;
@@ -250,7 +250,7 @@ des = 'Macro to load SAS package, version 20201010. Run %loadPackage() for help
*/
)/secure
/*** HELP END ***/
des = 'Macro to unload SAS package, version 20201010. Run %unloadPackage() for help info.'
des = 'Macro to unload SAS package, version 20201101. Run %unloadPackage() for help info.'
;
%if (%superq(packageName) = ) OR (%qupcase(&packageName.) = HELP) %then
%do;
@@ -265,7 +265,7 @@ des = 'Macro to unload SAS package, version 20201010. Run %unloadPackage() for h
%put ### This is short help information for the `unloadPackage` macro #;
%put #-------------------------------------------------------------------------------#;
%put # #;
%put # Macro to unload SAS packages, version `20201010` #;
%put # Macro to unload SAS packages, version `20201101` #;
%put # #;
%put # A SAS package is a zip file containing a group #;
%put # of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating #;
@@ -388,7 +388,7 @@ des = 'Macro to unload SAS package, version 20201010. Run %unloadPackage() for h
*/
)/secure
/*** HELP END ***/
des = 'Macro to get help about SAS package, version 20201010. Run %helpPackage() for help info.'
des = 'Macro to get help about SAS package, version 20201101. Run %helpPackage() for help info.'
;
%if (%superq(packageName) = ) OR (%qupcase(&packageName.) = HELP) %then
%do;
@@ -403,7 +403,7 @@ des = 'Macro to get help about SAS package, version 20201010. Run %helpPackage()
%put ### This is short help information for the `helpPackage` macro #;
%put #-------------------------------------------------------------------------------#;
%put # #;
%put # Macro to get help about SAS packages, version `20201010` #;
%put # Macro to get help about SAS packages, version `20201101` #;
%put # #;
%put # A SAS package is a zip file containing a group #;
%put # of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating #;
@@ -512,7 +512,7 @@ TODO:
- add MD5(&packageName.) value hash instead "package" word in filenames [DONE]
*/
/* Macros to install SAS packages, version 20201010 */
/* Macros to install SAS packages, version 20201101 */
/* A SAS package is a zip file containing a group of files
with SAS code (macros, functions, data steps generating
data, etc.) wrapped up together and %INCLUDEed by
@@ -528,7 +528,7 @@ TODO:
/secure
minoperator
/*** HELP END ***/
des = 'Macro to install SAS package, version 20201010. Run %%installPackage() for help info.'
des = 'Macro to install SAS package, version 20201101. Run %%installPackage() for help info.'
;
%if (%superq(packagesNames) = ) OR (%qupcase(&packagesNames.) = HELP) %then
%do;
@@ -543,7 +543,7 @@ des = 'Macro to install SAS package, version 20201010. Run %%installPackage() fo
%put ### This is short help information for the `installPackage` macro #;
%put #--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------#;;
%put # #;
%put # Macro to install SAS packages, version `20201010` #;
%put # Macro to install SAS packages, version `20201101` #;
%put # #;
%put # A SAS package is a zip file containing a group #;
%put # of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating #;
@@ -836,7 +836,7 @@ des = 'Macro to install SAS package, version 20201010. Run %%installPackage() fo
/* Macro to list SAS packages in packages folder.
Version 20201010
Version 20201101
A SAS package is a zip file containing a group
of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating
@@ -856,7 +856,7 @@ des = 'Macro to install SAS package, version 20201010. Run %%installPackage() fo
%macro listPackages()/PARMBUFF
des = 'Macro to list SAS packages from `packages` fileref, type %listPackages(HELP) for help, version 20201010.'
des = 'Macro to list SAS packages from `packages` fileref, type %listPackages(HELP) for help, version 20201101.'
;
%if %QUPCASE(&SYSPBUFF.) = %str(%(HELP%)) %then
%do;
@@ -871,20 +871,20 @@ des = 'Macro to list SAS packages from `packages` fileref, type %listPackages(HE
%put ### This is short help information for the `listPackages` macro #;
%put #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------#;;
%put # #;
%put # Macro to list available SAS packages, version `20201010` #;
%put # Macro to list available SAS packages, version `20201101` #;
%put # #;
%put # A SAS package is a zip file containing a group #;
%put # of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating #;
%put # data, etc.) wrapped up together and embedded inside the zip. #;
%put # #;
%put # The `%nrstr(%%listPackages())` macro lists packages available #;
%put # The `%nrstr(%%listPackages())` macro lists packages available #;
%put # in the packages folder. List is printed inthe SAS Log. #;
%put # #;
%put #### Parameters: #;
%put # #;
%put # NO PARAMETERS #;
%put # #;
%put # When used as: `%nrstr(%%listPackages(HELP))` it displays this help information. #;
%put # When used as: `%nrstr(%%listPackages(HELP))` it displays this help information. #;
%put # #;
%put #-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------#;
%put # #;
@@ -902,10 +902,10 @@ des = 'Macro to list SAS packages from `packages` fileref, type %listPackages(HE
%put # #;
%put # Run the following code in your SAS session: #;
%put ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas;
%put %nrstr( filename packages "C:/SAS_PACKAGES"; %%* setup a directory for packages; );
%put %nrstr( %%include packages(SPFinit.sas); %%* enable the framework; );
%put %nrstr( filename packages "C:/SAS_PACKAGES"; %%* setup a directory for packages; );
%put %nrstr( %%include packages(SPFinit.sas); %%* enable the framework; );
%put ;
%put %nrstr( %%listPackages() %%* list available packages; );
%put %nrstr( %%listPackages() %%* list available packages; );
%put ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;
%put ###########################################################################################;
%put ;
@@ -1002,7 +1002,7 @@ options ls = &ls_tmp. ps = &ps_tmp. &notes_tmp. &source_tmp.;
/* Macro to generate SAS packages.
Version 20201010
Version 20201101
A SAS package is a zip file containing a group
of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating
@@ -1019,14 +1019,22 @@ options ls = &ls_tmp. ps = &ps_tmp. &notes_tmp. &source_tmp.;
%macro generatePackage(
filesLocation /* location of package files
e.g. %sysfunc(pathname(work))/%lowcase(&packageName.) */
/* testing options: */
,testPackage=Y /* indicator if tests should be executed,
default value Y means "execute tests" */
,packages= /* location of other packages if there are
dependencies in loading */
)/secure
,testResults= /* location where tests results should be stored,
if null (the default) the WORK is used */
,sasexe= /* a DIRECTORY where the SAS binary is located,
if null (the default) then the !SASROOT is used */
,sascfgfile= /* a FILE with testing session configuration parameters
if null (the default) then no config file is pointed
during the SAS invocation,
if set to DEF then the !SASROOT/sasv9.cfg is used */
)/secure minoperator
/*** HELP END ***/
des = 'Macro to generate SAS packages, version 20201010. Run %generatePackage() for help info.'
minoperator
des = 'Macro to generate SAS packages, version 20201101. Run %generatePackage() for help info.'
;
%if (%superq(filesLocation) = ) OR (%qupcase(&filesLocation.) = HELP) %then
%do;
@@ -1041,7 +1049,7 @@ minoperator
%put ### This is short help information for the `generatePackage` macro #;
%put #-------------------------------------------------------------------------------#;
%put # #;
%put # Macro to generate SAS packages, version `20201010` #;
%put # Macro to generate SAS packages, version `20201101` #;
%put # #;
%put # A SAS package is a zip file containing a group #;
%put # of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating #;
@@ -1065,12 +1073,25 @@ minoperator
%put # `%nrstr(%%generatePackage(filesLocation=/path/to/packagename))` #;
%put # If empty displays this help information. #;
%put # #;
%put # Testing parameters: #;
%put # #;
%put # - `testPackage=` Indicator if tests should be executed. #;
%put # Default value: `Y`, means "execute tests" #;
%put # #;
%put # - `packages=` Location of other packages for testing #;
%put # if there are dependencies in loading the package. #;
%put # #;
%put # - `testResults=` Location where tests results should be stored, #;
%put # if null (the default) then the session WORK is used. #;
%put # #;
%put # - `sasexe=` Location of a DIRECTORY where the SAS binary is located, #;
%put # if null (the default) then the `!SASROOT` is used. #;
%put # #;
%put # - `sascfgfile=` Location of a FILE with testing session configuration #;
%put # parameters, if null (the default) then no config file #;
%put # is pointed during the SAS invocation, #;
%put # if set to `DEF` then the `!SASROOT/sasv9.cfg` is used. #;
%put # #;
%put #-------------------------------------------------------------------------------#;
%put #################################################################################;
%put ;
@@ -1234,18 +1255,18 @@ filename &zipReferrence. ZIP "&filesLocation./%lowcase(&packageName.).zip";
/*** HELP START ***/
/*
Locate all files with code in base folder (i.e. at filesLocation directory)
Locate all files with code in base folder, i.e. at `filesLocation` directory.
*/
/*
Remember to prepare the description.sas file for you package.
Remember to prepare the `description.sas` file for you package.
The colon (:) is a field separator and is restricted
in lines of the header part.
The file should contain the following obligatory information:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> **HEADER** <<
Type: Package
Package: ShortPackageName
Title: A title/brief info for log note about your packages
Package: PackageName
Title: A title/brief info for log note about your packages.
Version: X.Y
Author: Firstname1 Lastname1 (xxxxxx1@yyyyy.com), Firstname2 Lastname2 (xxxxxx2@yyyyy.com)
Maintainer: Firstname Lastname (xxxxxx@yyyyy.com)
@@ -1264,9 +1285,9 @@ DESCRIPTION START:
DESCRIPTION END:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Name of the 'type' of folder and files.sas inside must be in _low_ case letters.
Name of the `type` of folder and `files.sas` inside must be in the _low_ case letters.
If order of loading is important, the 'sequential number'
If order of loading is important, the sequential number
can be used to order multiple types in the way you wish.
The "tree structure" of the folder could be for example as follows:
@@ -1337,12 +1358,19 @@ DESCRIPTION END:
|
+-<sequential number>_<type [in lower case]>
|
+-...
|
+-00n_clean [if you need to clean something up after exec file execution,
| | content of the files will be printed to the log before execution]
| |
| +-<no file, in this case folder may be skipped>
|
+-...
|
+-999_test [tests executed during package generation, XCMD options must be turned-on]
| |
| +-test1.sas [a file with a code for test1]
| |
| +-test2.sas [a file with a code for test2]
|
+-...
...
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
@@ -1931,7 +1959,7 @@ data _null_;
put "filename &_PackageFileref_. list;" /;
put ' %put NOTE- ;';
put ' %put NOTE: ' @; put "Lazy data for package &packageName., version &packageVersion., license &packageLicense.; ";
put ' %put NOTE: ' @; put "Data for package &packageName., version &packageVersion., license &packageLicense.; ";
put ' %put NOTE: ' @; put "*** &packageTitle. ***; ";
put ' %put NOTE- ' @; put "Generated: %sysfunc(datetime(), datetime21.); ";
put ' %put NOTE- ' @; put "Author(s): &packageAuthor.; ";
@@ -1956,12 +1984,21 @@ data _null_;
put ' call execute(''%nrstr(%include' " &_PackageFileref_.(_" folder +(-1) "." file +(-1) ') / nosource2;)'');';
put 'end;';
end;
/* use lazyData to reload data type */
if ( upcase(type) =: 'DATA' ) then
do;
put 'if findw(lazyData, "' fileshort +(-1) '") then';
put 'do;';
put ' put "NOTE- Dataset ' fileshort 'from the file ""' file +(-1) '"" will be loaded";';
put ' call execute(''%nrstr(%include' " &_PackageFileref_.(_" folder +(-1) "." file +(-1) ') / nosource2;)'');';
put 'end;';
end;
end;
put 'run;';
put '%put NOTE- ;';
put '%put NOTE: '"Lazy data for package &packageName., version &packageVersion., license &packageLicense.;";
put '%put NOTE: '"Data for package &packageName., version &packageVersion., license &packageLicense.;";
put '%put NOTE- *** END ***;' /;
put "/* lazydata.sas end */" /;
stop;
@@ -2242,7 +2279,7 @@ data _null_;
put " infile &_PackageFileref_.(description.sas) end = EOF; ";
put ' input; ';
put ' if upcase(strip(_infile_)) =: "DESCRIPTION END:" then printer = 0; ';
put ' if printer then put @1 _infile_; ';
put ' if printer then put "| " _infile_; ';
put ' if upcase(strip(_infile_)) =: "DESCRIPTION START:" then printer = 1; ';
put ' end; ';
put ' else stop; ';
@@ -2255,7 +2292,7 @@ data _null_;
set &filesWithCodes. end = EOFDS nobs = NOBS curobs = CUROBS;
if upcase(type) in: ('TEST') then continue; /* exclude tests */
put 'put @5 "' CUROBS +(-1) ')" @10 "' type '" @21 "' fileshort '";';
put 'put @5 "' CUROBS +(-1) '." @10 "' type '" @21 "' fileshort '";';
end;
%if %bquote(&packageRequired.) ne %then
@@ -2280,7 +2317,7 @@ data _null_;
put ' end ; ';
%end;
put 'put "***"; put "* SAS package generated by generatePackage, version 20201010 *"; put "***";';
put 'put "***"; put "* SAS package generated by generatePackage, version 20201101 *"; put "***";';
put 'run; ' /;
@@ -2290,7 +2327,7 @@ data _null_;
put ' do until (EOF); ';
put " infile &_PackageFileref_.(license.sas) end = EOF; ";
put ' input; ';
put ' put @1 _infile_; ';
put ' put "| " _infile_; ';
put ' end; ';
put ' else stop; ';
put 'run; ' /;
@@ -2317,8 +2354,8 @@ data _null_;
if upcase(type) in: ('TEST') then continue; /* exclude tests */
select;
when (upcase(type) in ("DATA" "LAZYDATA")) fileshort2 = fileshort;
when (upcase(type) = "MACRO" ) fileshort2 = cats('''%', fileshort, '()''');
when (upcase(type) in ("DATA" "LAZYDATA")) fileshort2 = cats("'", fileshort, "'" );
when (upcase(type) =: "MACRO" ) fileshort2 = cats('''%', fileshort, "()'");
when (upcase(type) =: "FUNCTION" ) fileshort2 = cats("'", fileshort, "()'" );
when (upcase(type) =: "IMLMODULE" ) fileshort2 = cats("'", fileshort, "()'" );
when (upcase(type) =: "PROTO" ) fileshort2 = cats("'", fileshort, "()'" );
@@ -2342,29 +2379,31 @@ data _null_;
'put; put '' *> No help info found. Try %helpPackage(packageName,*) to display all.''; put; stop; ' /
'end; ';
put ' do until(EOFDS); ';
put ' set WORK._last_ end = EOFDS nobs = NOBS; ';
put ' length memberX $ 1024; ';
put ' memberX = cats("_",folder,".",file); ';
put ' set WORK._last_ end = EOFDS nobs = NOBS; ';
put ' length memberX $ 1024; ';
put ' memberX = cats("_",folder,".",file); ';
/* inner data step in call execute to read each embedded file */
put ' call execute("data _null_; ");';
put " call execute('infile &_PackageFileref_.(' || strip(memberX) || ') end = EOF; ');";
put ' call execute(" printer = 0; ");';
put ' call execute(" do until(EOF); ");';
put ' call execute(" input; ");';
put ' call execute(" if upcase(strip(_infile_)) ';
put ' = ''/*** HELP END ***/'' then printer = 0; ");';
put ' call execute(" if printer then put @1 _infile_; ");';
put ' call execute(" if upcase(strip(_infile_)) ';
put ' = ''/*** HELP START ***/'' then printer = 1; ");';
put ' call execute(" end; ");';
put ' call execute(" put "" "" / "" ""; ");';
put ' call execute(" stop; ");';
put ' call execute("run; ");';
put ' if lowcase(type) =: "data" then ';
put ' do; ';
put ' call execute("title ""Dataset " || strip(fileshort) || " from package &packageName. ""; ");';
put ' call execute("proc contents data = " || strip(fileshort) || "; run; title; ");';
put ' end; ';
put ' call execute("data _null_; ");';
put " call execute('infile &_PackageFileref_.(' || strip(memberX) || ') end = EOF; ');";
put ' call execute(" printer = 0; ");';
put ' call execute(" do until(EOF); ");';
put ' call execute(" input; ");';
put ' call execute(" if upcase(strip(_infile_)) ';
put ' = ''/*** HELP END ***/'' then printer = 0; ");';
put ' call execute(" if printer then put ""| "" _infile_; ");';
put ' call execute(" if upcase(strip(_infile_)) ';
put ' = ''/*** HELP START ***/'' then printer = 1; ");';
put ' call execute(" end; ");';
put ' call execute(" put "" "" / "" ""; ");';
put ' call execute(" stop; ");';
put ' call execute("run; ");';
put ' if lowcase(type) in ("data" "lazydata") then ';
put ' do; ';
put ' call execute("title ""Dataset " || strip(fileshort) || " from package &packageName. ""; ");';
put ' if exist(fileshort) then call execute("proc contents data = " || strip(fileshort) || "; run; ");';
put ' else call execute("data _null_; put ""| Dataset " || strip(fileshort) || " does not exist.""; run;");';
put ' call execute("title; ");';
put ' end; ';
/**/
put " end; ";
put " stop; ";
@@ -2477,22 +2516,99 @@ filename &zipReferrence. clear;
/* locate sas binaries */
%local SASROOT SASEXE SASWORK;
filename sasroot "!SASROOT";
%let SASROOT=%sysfunc(PATHNAME(sasroot));
filename sasroot;
%put *&SASROOT.*;
%let SASEXE=&SASROOT./sas;
%put *&SASEXE.*;
%if %superq(sasexe) = %then /* empty value points to the SAS binary file based in the !sasroot directory */
%do;
filename sasroot "!SASROOT";
%let SASROOT=%sysfunc(PATHNAME(sasroot));
filename sasroot;
%put *&SASROOT.*;
%let SASEXE=&SASROOT./sas;
%end;
%else
%do;
filename sasroot "&SASEXE.";
%if %sysfunc(fexist(sasroot)) %then
%do;
%let SASROOT=%sysfunc(PATHNAME(sasroot));
filename sasroot;
%put *&SASROOT.*;
%let SASEXE=&SASROOT./sas;
%end;
%else
%do;
%put ERROR: Provided location of the SAS binary file does not exist!;
%put ERROR- The directory was: &SASEXE.;
%put ERROR- Testing would not be executed.;
filename sasroot;
%GOTO NOTESTING;
%end;
%end;
%if 0 = %sysfunc(fileexist(&SASEXE.)) /* Linux/UNIX */
AND
0 = %sysfunc(fileexist(&SASEXE..exe)) /* WINDOWS */
%then
%do;
%put ERROR: Provided location of the SAS binary file does not contain SAS file!;
%put ERROR- The file searched was: &SASEXE.;
%put ERROR- Testing would not be executed.;
%GOTO NOTESTING;
%end;
%put * Location of the SAS binary is: ;
%put * &=SASEXE. ;
/* locate sas work */
%let SASWORK=%sysfunc(GETOPTION(work));
%put *&SASWORK.*;
options DLCREATEDIR; /* turns-on creation of subdirectories */
/* temporary location for tests results */
libname TEST "&SASWORK./test_%lowcase(%sysfunc(datetime(),b8601dt19.))";
libname TESTWORK "%sysfunc(pathname(TEST))/work";
%local dirForTest;
%let dirForTest = %sysfunc(pathname(TEST));
/* location of the config file */
%local SASCONFIG; /* by default a local macrovariable is empty, so no file would be pointed as a config file */
%if %Qupcase(&sascfgfile.) = DEF %then /* the DEF value points to the sasv9.cfg file in the sasroot directory */
%do;
%let SASCONFIG = -config ""&SASROOT./sasv9.cfg"";
%put * The following SAS config file will be used:;
%put * &SASCONFIG.;
%end;
%else %if %superq(sascfgfile) NE %then /* nonempty path points to user defined config file */
%do;
%if %sysfunc(fileexist(&sascfgfile.)) %then
%do;
%let SASCONFIG = -config ""&SASCFGFILE."";
%put * The following SAS config file will be used:;
%put * &SASCONFIG.;
%end;
%else
%do;
%put ERROR: Provided SAS config file does not exist!;
%put ERROR- The file was: &SASCFGFILE.;
%put ERROR- Testing would not be executed.;
%GOTO NOTESTING;
%end;
%end;
options DLCREATEDIR; /* turns-on creation of subdirectories by libname */
/* temporary location for tests results is WORK unless developer provide &testResults. */
%local testPackageTimesamp;
%let testPackageTimesamp = %lowcase(&packageName._%sysfunc(datetime(),b8601dt15.));
%if %qsysfunc(fileexist(%bquote(&testResults.))) %then
%do;
libname TEST "&testResults./test_&testPackageTimesamp.";
%end;
%else
%do;
libname TEST "&SASWORK./test_&testPackageTimesamp.";
%end;
/* test work points to the SAS session work */
libname TESTWORK "&SASWORK./testwork_&testPackageTimesamp.";
%local dirForTest dirForTestWork;
%let dirForTest = %sysfunc(pathname(TEST));
%let dirForTestWork = %sysfunc(pathname(TESTWORK));
%put &=dirForTest.;
%put &=dirForTestWork.;
/* remember location of sessions current directory */
filename currdir ".";
@@ -2514,6 +2630,12 @@ filename currdir list;
%put NOTE: changing current folder to:;
%put *%sysfunc(DLGCDIR(&dirForTest.))*;
/* turn off the note about quoted string length */
%local quotelenmax_tmp;
%let quotelenmax_tmp = %sysfunc(getoption(quotelenmax));
options NOquotelenmax;
/* the first test is for loading package, testing help and unloading */
/*-1-*/
data _null_;
@@ -2529,6 +2651,8 @@ data _null_;
/* load */
put '%loadpackage'"(&packageName.,";
put " path=&filesLocation.)" /;
put '%loadpackage'"(&packageName.,";
put " path=&filesLocation., lazyData=*)" /;
/* help */
put '%helpPackage'"(&packageName.,";
@@ -2552,6 +2676,8 @@ setup for testing session:
-work - location for work
-noterminal - for batch execution mode
-rsasuser - to avoid the "Unable to copy SASUSER registry to WORK registry." warning
-linesize - MAX
-pagesize - MAX
*/
systask kill sas0 wait;
%local sasstat0 TEST_0 TESTRC_0;;
@@ -2561,10 +2687,10 @@ systask command
-sysin ""&dirForTest./&TEST_0..sas""
-print ""&dirForTest./&TEST_0..lst""
-log ""&dirForTest./&TEST_0..log""
-config ""&SASROOT./sasv9.cfg""
-work ""&dirForTest./work""
&SASCONFIG.
-work ""&dirForTestWork.""
-noterminal
-rsasuser"
-rsasuser -linesize MAX -pagesize MAX"
taskname=sas0
status=sasstat0
WAIT
@@ -2639,7 +2765,9 @@ data _null_;
put '%include packages(loadpackage.sas);' /; /* for older versions when the SPFinit.sas did not exist */
put '%loadpackage'"(&packageName.,";
put " path=&filesLocation.) " /;
put " path=&filesLocation.)" /;
put '%loadpackage'"(&packageName.,";
put " path=&filesLocation., lazyData=*)" /;
run;
%local t;
@@ -2651,8 +2779,8 @@ systask command
-sysin ""&dirForTest./&&TEST_&t...sas""
-print ""&dirForTest./&&TEST_&t...lst""
-log ""&dirForTest./&&TEST_&t...log""
-config ""&SASROOT./sasv9.cfg""
-work ""&dirForTest./work""
&SASCONFIG.
-work ""&dirForTestWork.""
-autoexec ""&dirForTest./autoexec.sas""
-noterminal
-rsasuser"
@@ -2722,6 +2850,9 @@ title;
%put *%sysfunc(DLGCDIR(%sysfunc(pathname(currdir))))*;
filename CURRDIR clear;
/* turn on the original value of the note about quoted string length */
options &quotelenmax_tmp.;
/* if you do not want any test to be executed */
%NOTESTING:
@@ -2808,7 +2939,7 @@ TODO: (in Polish)
*/
)/secure
/*** HELP END ***/
des = 'Macro to load multiple SAS packages at one run, version 20201010. Run %loadPackages() for help info.'
des = 'Macro to load multiple SAS packages at one run, version 20201101. Run %loadPackages() for help info.'
parmbuff
;
%if (%superq(packagesNames) = ) OR (%qupcase(&packagesNames.) = HELP) %then
@@ -2824,7 +2955,7 @@ parmbuff
%put ### This is short help information for the `loadPackageS` macro #;
%put #-------------------------------------------------------------------------------#;
%put # #;
%put # Macro wrapper for the loadPackage macro, version `20201010` #;
%put # Macro wrapper for the loadPackage macro, version `20201101` #;
%put # #;
%put # A SAS package is a zip file containing a group #;
%put # of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating #;
@@ -2908,7 +3039,7 @@ parmbuff
hashing_file() function, SAS 9.4M6 */
)/secure
/*** HELP END ***/
des = 'Macro to verify SAS package with the hash digest, version 20201010. Run %verifyPackage() for help info.'
des = 'Macro to verify SAS package with the hash digest, version 20201101. Run %verifyPackage() for help info.'
;
%if (%superq(packageName) = ) OR (%qupcase(&packageName.) = HELP) %then
%do;
@@ -2923,7 +3054,7 @@ des = 'Macro to verify SAS package with the hash digest, version 20201010. Run %
%put ### This is short help information for the `verifyPackage` macro #;
%put #-------------------------------------------------------------------------------#;
%put # #;
%put # Macro to verify SAS package with it hash digest, version `20201010` #;
%put # Macro to verify SAS package with it hash digest, version `20201101` #;
%put # #;
%put # A SAS package is a zip file containing a group #;
%put # of SAS codes (macros, functions, data steps generating #;

View File

@@ -18,12 +18,20 @@ data class;
WH = weight + height;
run;
```
SHA256 digest for SQLinDS: D76B85EFF129678B45233FB397A2BDB8D23F234013BD821D55141CA18DD5589E
SHA256 digest for SQLinDS: 135DC50C0412B8CEAF6D5349B8A203C0ADB23D4F5C2680B6A35FD2E5482B6C49
[Documentation for SQLinDS](https://github.com/yabwon/SAS_PACKAGES/blob/master/packages/sqlinds.md "Documentation for SQLinDS")
---
- **MacroCore**\[1\], a macro library for SAS application developers. Over 100 macros for Base SAS, metadata, and Viya. Provided by the [SASjs framework](https://sasjs.io "SASjs framework").
SHA256 digest for MacroCore: A23C29529F3CE7D0C8BEE9545C5D22D5B5594907547374A5135B8E5A48D7687B
[Documentation for MacroCore](https://core.sasjs.io "Documentation for MacroCore")
---
- **DFA** (Dynamic Function Arrays)\[0.2\], contains set of macros and FCMP functions which implement: a dynamically allocated array, a stack, a fifo queue, an ordered stack, and a priority queue, run `%helpPackage(DFA,createDFArray)` to find examples.
```
%createDFArray(ArrDynamic, resizefactor=17);
@@ -51,11 +59,11 @@ data _null_;
end;
run;
```
SHA256 digest for DFA: 43AE8BB0FC7D2121AABDD8DB8AD2C3F226C7D2699CAACC171FCB72B75D9141FA
SHA256 digest for DFA: E67A0863992722A5F535F56E14EF8D19A55F74FB374447BF11B5ED74029C29CB
---
- **macroArray**\[0.5\], implementation of an array concept in a macro language, e.g.
- **macroArray**\[0.7\], implementation of an array concept in a macro language, e.g.
```
%array(ABC[17] (111:127), macarray=Y);
@@ -74,13 +82,13 @@ SHA256 digest for DFA: 43AE8BB0FC7D2121AABDD8DB8AD2C3F226C7D2699CAACC171FCB72B75
which = 1:H:2
);
```
SHA256 digest for macroArray: 085A0F3D544EAF01378BB6C6B4F429123F8BFEEFC76013D1B05DFADFEE3FA661
SHA256 digest for macroArray: 75056F508E96296DC50096BBB054C58334DB913AD37885958099EDCE0C330CB2
[Documentation for macroArray](https://github.com/yabwon/SAS_PACKAGES/blob/master/packages/macroarray.md "Documentation for macroArray")
---
- **BasePlus**\[0.7\] adds a bunch of functionalities I am missing in BASE SAS, such as:
- **BasePlus**\[0.8\] adds a bunch of functionalities I am missing in BASE SAS, such as:
```
call arrMissToRight(myArray);
call arrFillMiss(17, myArray);
@@ -94,7 +102,7 @@ format x bool.;
%put %getVars(sashelp.class, pattern = ght$, sep = +, varRange = _numeric_);
```
SHA256 digest for BasePlus: 54232DA5E253EB58E49A09DD0DF244F433B61983D921E27F2E4FFB1EA73A5C6D
SHA256 digest for BasePlus: 9549378E5F81DA4DC421C366DF006D270261852336CE3DCD88FF8E2A759938C8
[Documentation for BasePlus](https://github.com/yabwon/SAS_PACKAGES/blob/master/packages/baseplus.md "Documentation for BasePlus")
@@ -102,6 +110,6 @@ SHA256 digest for BasePlus: 54232DA5E253EB58E49A09DD0DF244F433B61983D921E27F2E4F
- **dynMacroArray**\[0.2\], set of macros (wrappers for a hash table) emulating dynamic array in the data step (macro predecessor of DFA)
SHA256 digest for dynMacroArray: 281D9493564A8185B858D9525AA7D9D5343E42414AAB1D8A00AE85AB80882661
SHA256 digest for dynMacroArray: 694AACE925B7F4E149C3B90383F56370ED76233D8F5040713D66C1F3A4E414FE
---

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,29 @@
/* 20201029 */
MacroCore: A23C29529F3CE7D0C8BEE9545C5D22D5B5594907547374A5135B8E5A48D7687B
/* 20201023 */
macroArray: 75056F508E96296DC50096BBB054C58334DB913AD37885958099EDCE0C330CB2
/* 20201020 */
BasePlus: 9549378E5F81DA4DC421C366DF006D270261852336CE3DCD88FF8E2A759938C8
/* 20201018 */
BasePlus: BDEA8AA6EED9739284ABF8297BEC7EC0F12490D72EF9B685F477E99AFA734B82
DFA: E67A0863992722A5F535F56E14EF8D19A55F74FB374447BF11B5ED74029C29CB
dynMacroArray: 694AACE925B7F4E149C3B90383F56370ED76233D8F5040713D66C1F3A4E414FE
macroArray: 42771AA7CD2A0608E1EE25F104F21CCCC296919910E4BCA7AD9AE46A291BB8D7
SQLinDS: 135DC50C0412B8CEAF6D5349B8A203C0ADB23D4F5C2680B6A35FD2E5482B6C49
/* 20201017 */
macroArray: 022A7CD5F0C1E72032CC3426A8AC53D61A8766868B6B48195BC69F59007323B8
/* 20201014 */
BasePlus: 4E0C2A45CF8A5863C0D054568C712D10A296240877D604E77A778451A740874B
DFA: CC19058354D4B51F0675A8414F18089CCC583AA45822CEFC79368F06D8715846
dynMacroArray: 0854317DE7A97DCFE30411B37D909F04BBE12F1F9F7C45D39CBCD61641158F80
macroArray: 96215AC04EF26C97719F6B1EDA5ACAF7DD491B7F2DDDE9985A0560CD2916ABA1
SQLinDS: FCD7EE5B59E08CD1A2E31F6A5D94D7275C99AFFAACEA3D187F60A57CD0520FCD
/* 20201010 */
SQLinDS: D76B85EFF129678B45233FB397A2BDB8D23F234013BD821D55141CA18DD5589E
DFA: 43AE8BB0FC7D2121AABDD8DB8AD2C3F226C7D2699CAACC171FCB72B75D9141FA
@@ -5,7 +31,6 @@ macroArray: 085A0F3D544EAF01378BB6C6B4F429123F8BFEEFC76013D1B05DFADFEE3FA661
BasePlus: 54232DA5E253EB58E49A09DD0DF244F433B61983D921E27F2E4FFB1EA73A5C6D
dynMacroArray: 281D9493564A8185B858D9525AA7D9D5343E42414AAB1D8A00AE85AB80882661
/* 20201007 */
BasePlus: 884BAD527DE77A9AF4325053BF42B3B2FCD3DB1239B63D70B1198064095E1A6D
DFA: 57944FF5ABC7A9879C402412DA0C18C38206301930DC834BC7DD3E968E283D1E

View File

@@ -1,19 +1,21 @@
/*** HELP START ***/
/*
## >>> library `dsSQL`: <<< <a name="library-dssql"></a> ########################
/* >>> dsSQL library: <<<
*
* The dsSQL library stores temporary views
* generated during the %SQL() macro execution.
* If possible a subdirectory of WORK is created as:
The `dsSQL` library stores temporary views
generated during the `%SQL()` macro execution.
LIBNAME dsSQL BASE "%sysfunc(pathname(WORK))/dsSQLtmp";
* if not possible then redirects to WORK as:
LIBNAME dsSQL BASE "%sysfunc(pathname(WORK))";
**/
If possible a subdirectory of the `WORK` location is created, like:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
LIBNAME dsSQL BASE "%sysfunc(pathname(WORK))/dsSQLtmp";
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
if not possible, then redirects to the `WORK` location, like:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
LIBNAME dsSQL BASE "%sysfunc(pathname(WORK))";
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
*/
/*** HELP END ***/
data _null_;
@@ -25,5 +27,5 @@ data _null_;
rc1 = LIBNAME("dsSQL", "%sysfunc(pathname(work))", "BASE");
run;
/* list details about the library in the log */
/* list the details about the library in the log */
libname dsSQL LIST;

View File

@@ -1,19 +1,15 @@
/*** HELP START ***/
/*
## >>> `%dsSQL_Inner()` macro: <<< <a name="dssql-inner-macro"></a> #############
/* >>> %dsSQL_Inner() macro: <<<
*
* Internal macro called by dsSQL() function.
* The macro generates a uniqualy named sql view on the fly
* which is stored in DSSQL library.
*
* Recommended for SAS 9.3 and higher.
* Based on paper:
* "Use the Full Power of SAS in Your Function-Style Macros"
* by Mike Rhoads, Westat, Rockville, MD
* https://support.sas.com/resources/papers/proceedings12/004-2012.pdf
*
**/
**Internal** macro called by `dsSQL()` function.
The macro generates a uniquely named SQL view on the fly
which is then stored in the `dsSQL` library.
Recommended for *SAS 9.3* and higher.
---
*/
/*** HELP END ***/
/* inner macro */
@@ -57,7 +53,7 @@
%put *****************;
proc sql;
%include &tempfile2.; /* &query */
%include &tempfile2.; /* the &query */
;
quit;
filename &tempfile1. clear;

View File

@@ -1,41 +1,47 @@
/*** HELP START ***/
/*
## >>> `%SQL()` macro: <<< <a name="dssql-macro"></a> ###########################
/* >>> %SQL() macro: <<<
*
* Main macro which allows to use
* SQL's queries in the data step.
* Recommended for SAS 9.3 and higher.
* Based on paper:
* "Use the Full Power of SAS in Your Function-Style Macros"
* by Mike Rhoads, Westat, Rockville, MD
* https://support.sas.com/resources/papers/proceedings12/004-2012.pdf
*
* SYNTAX:
The **main** macro which allows to use
SQL queries in the data step.
Recommended for *SAS 9.3* and higher.
Based on the article *"Use the Full Power of SAS in Your Function-Style Macros"*
by *Mike Rhoads* (Westat, Rockville), available at:
[https://support.sas.com/resources/papers/proceedings12/004-2012.pdf](https://support.sas.com/resources/papers/proceedings12/004-2012.pdf)
%sql(<nonempty sql querry code>)
### SYNTAX: ###################################################################
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%sql(<nonempty sql querry code>)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
* The sql querry code is limited to 32000 bytes.
*
* EXAMPLE 1: simple sql query
The sql query code is limited to *32000* bytes.
data class_subset;
set %SQL(select name, sex, height from sashelp.class where age > 12);
run;
### EXAMPLES: #################################################################
* EXAMPLE 2: query with dataset options
**EXAMPLE 1**: simple SQL query
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
data class_subset;
set %SQL(select name, sex, height from sashelp.class where age > 12);
run;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
data renamed;
set %SQL(select * from sashelp.class where sex = "F")(rename = (age=age2));
run;
* EXAMPLE 3: dictionaries in datastep
data dictionary;
set %SQL(select * from dictionary.macros);
run;
**/
**EXAMPLE 2**: query with dataset options
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
data renamed;
set %SQL(select * from sashelp.class where sex = "F")(rename = (age=age2));
run;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 3**: dictionaries in the data step
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
data dictionary;
set %SQL(select * from dictionary.macros);
run;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
*/
/*** HELP END ***/

View File

@@ -1,19 +1,26 @@
/*** HELP START ***/
/*
## >>> `dsSQL()` function: <<< <a name="dssql-function"></a> ####################
/* >>> dsSQL() function: <<<
*
* Internal function called by %SQL() macro.
* The function pass query code from the %SQL()
* macro to the %dsSQL_Inner() innternal macreo.
*
* Recommended for SAS 9.3 and higher.
* Based on paper:
* "Use the Full Power of SAS in Your Function-Style Macros"
* by Mike Rhoads, Westat, Rockville, MD
* https://support.sas.com/resources/papers/proceedings12/004-2012.pdf
*
**/
**Internal** function called by the `%SQL()` macro.
The function pass a query code from the `%SQL()`
macro to the `%dsSQL_Inner()` internal macro.
Recommended for *SAS 9.3* and higher.
### SYNTAX: ###################################################################
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
dsSQL(unique_index_2, query)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**Arguments description**:
1. `unique_index_2` - *Numeric*, internal variable, a unique index for views.
2. `query` - *Character*, internal variable, contains query text.
---
*/
/*** HELP END ***/
proc fcmp

View File

@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
Type: Package :/*required, not null, constant value*/
Package: SQLinDS :/*required, not null, up to 24 characters, naming restrictions like for a dataset name! */
Title: SQL queries in Data Step :/*required, not null*/
Version: 2.1 :/*required, not null*/
Version: 2.2 :/*required, not null*/
Author: Mike Rhoads (RhoadsM1@Westat.com) :/*required, not null*/
Maintainer: Bartosz Jablonski (yabwon@gmail.com) :/*required, not null*/
License: MIT :/*required, not null, values: MIT, GPL2, BSD, etc.*/
@@ -18,28 +18,32 @@ Required: "Base SAS Software" :/*optional, COMMA separated, Q
/* All the text below will be used in help */
DESCRIPTION START:
The SQLinDS package is an implementation of
the macro-function-sandwich concept introduced in:
"Use the Full Power of SAS in Your Function-Style Macros"
the article by Mike Rhoads, Westat, Rockville, MD
# The SQLinDS package [ver. 2.2] <a name="sqlinds-package"></a> ###############################################
The **SQLinDS** package is an implementation of
the *macro-function-sandwich* concept introduced in the
*"Use the Full Power of SAS in Your Function-Style Macros"*,
the article by *Mike Rhoads (Westat, Rockville)*.
Copy of the article is available at:
https://support.sas.com/resources/papers/proceedings12/004-2012.pdf
Package provides ability to "execute" SQL queries inside a datastep, e.g.
[https://support.sas.com/resources/papers/proceedings12/004-2012.pdf](https://support.sas.com/resources/papers/proceedings12/004-2012.pdf)
Package provides ability to *execute* SQL queries inside a data step, e.g.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
data class;
set %SQL(select * from sashelp.class);
run;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
See the help for the `%SQL()` macro to find more examples.
### Content ###################################################################
SQLinDS package contains the following components:
1) %SQL() macro - the main package macro available for the User
2) dsSQL() function (internal)
3) %dsSQL_inner() macro (internal)
4) Library DSSQL (created in a subdirectory of the WORK library)
See help for the %SQL() macro to find more examples.
1. `%SQL()` macro - the main package macro available for the User
2. `dsSQL()` function (internal)
3. `%dsSQL_inner()` macro (internal)
4. Library `DSSQL` (created as a subdirectory of the `WORK` library)
---
DESCRIPTION END:

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
resetline;
filename packages "C:\SAS_PACKAGES\SASPackagesFramework";
filename packages "C:\SAS_PACKAGES\SPF";
%include packages(SPFinit.sas);
ods html;

View File

@@ -1,82 +0,0 @@
options dlCreateDir;
libname dsSQL "%sysfunc(pathname(work))/dsSQLtmp";
/* makro zewnetrzne */
%MACRO SQL() / PARMBUFF SECURE;
%let SYSPBUFF = %superq(SYSPBUFF); /* maskujemy znaki specjalne */
%let SYSPBUFF = %substr(&SYSPBUFF,2,%LENGTH(&SYSPBUFF) - 2); /* kasujemy otwierający i zamykający nawias */
%let SYSPBUFF = %superq(SYSPBUFF); /* maskujemy jeszcze raz */
%let SYSPBUFF = %sysfunc(quote(&SYSPBUFF)); /* dodajemy cudzyslowy */
%put ***the querry***;
%put &SYSPBUFF.;
%put ****************;
%local UNIQUE_INDEX; /* dodatkowa zmienna indeksujaca, zeby tworzony widok byl unikalny */
%let UNIQUE_INDEX = &SYSINDEX; /* przypisujemy jej wartosc */
%sysfunc(dsSQL(&UNIQUE_INDEX, &SYSPBUFF)) /* <-- wywolulemy funkcje dsSQL */
%MEND SQL;
/* funkcja */
%macro MacroFunctionSandwich_functions();
%local _cmplib_;
options APPEND=(cmplib = WORK.DATASTEPSQLFUNCTIONS) ;
%let _cmplib_ = %sysfunc(getoption(cmplib));
%put NOTE:[&sysmacroname.] *&=_cmplib_*;
options cmplib = _null_;
proc fcmp outlib=work.datastepSQLfunctions.package;
function dsSQL(unique_index_2, query $) $ 41;
length query query_arg $ 32000 viewname $ 41; /* query_arg mozna zmienic na dluzszy, np. 32000 :-) */
query_arg = dequote(query);
rc = run_macro('dsSQL_Inner', unique_index_2, query_arg, viewname); /* <-- wywolulemy makro wewnetrzne dsSQL_Inner */
if rc = 0 then return(trim(viewname));
else do;
return(" ");
put 'ERROR:[function dsSQL] A problem with the function';
end;
endsub;
run;
options cmplib = &_cmplib_.;
%let _cmplib_ = %sysfunc(getoption(cmplib));
%put NOTE:[&sysmacroname.] *&=_cmplib_*;
%mend MacroFunctionSandwich_functions;
%MacroFunctionSandwich_functions()
/* delete macro MacroFunctionSandwich_functions since it is not needed */
proc sql;
create table _%sysfunc(datetime(), hex16.)_ as
select memname, objname
from dictionary.catalogs
where
objname = upcase('MACROFUNCTIONSANDWICH_FUNCTIONS')
and objtype = 'MACRO'
and libname = 'WORK'
order by memname, objname
;
quit;
data _null_;
set _last_;
call execute('proc catalog cat = work.' !! strip(memname) !! ' et = macro force;');
call execute('delete ' !! strip(objname) !! '; run;');
call execute('quit;');
run;
proc delete data = _last_;
run;
/* makro wewnetrzne */
%MACRO dsSQL_Inner() / SECURE;
%local query;
%let query = %superq(query_arg);
%let query = %sysfunc(dequote(&query));
%let viewname = dsSQL.dsSQLtmpview&UNIQUE_INDEX_2;
proc sql;
create view &viewname as &query;
quit;
%MEND dsSQL_Inner;

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
- [The BasePlus package [ver. 0.7]](#baseplus-package)
- [The BasePlus package [ver. 0.8]](#baseplus-package)
- [Content description](#content-description)
* [`%getVars()` macro](#getvars-macro)
* [`%QgetVars()` macro](#qgetvars-macro)
@@ -28,11 +28,17 @@
* [`quickSortHash()` subroutine](#quicksorthash-subroutine)
* [`quickSortHashSDDV()` subroutine](#quicksorthashsddv-subroutine)
* [`quickSortLight()` subroutine](#quicksortlight-subroutine)
* [`%dedupListS()` macro](#deduplists-macro)
* [`%dedupListC()` macro](#deduplistc-macro)
* [`%dedupListP()` macro](#deduplistp-macro)
* [`%dedupListX()` macro](#deduplistx-macro)
* [`%QdedupListX()` macro](#qdeduplistx-macro)
* [License](#license)
---
# The BasePlus package [ver. 0.7] <a name="baseplus-package"></a> ###############################################
# The BasePlus package [ver. 0.8] <a name="baseplus-package"></a> ###############################################
The **BasePlus** package implements useful
functions and functionalities I miss in the BASE SAS.
@@ -40,6 +46,7 @@ functions and functionalities I miss in the BASE SAS.
It is inspired by various people, e.g.
- at the SAS-L discussion list
- at the communities.sas.com (SASware Ballot Ideas)
- at the Office...
- etc.
Kudos to all who inspired me to generate this package:
@@ -149,44 +156,53 @@ Kudos to all who inspired me to generate this package:
run;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
### Content ###################################################################
**Example 7**: Deduplicate values from a space separated list.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%let list = 4 5 6 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 5 6;
%put *%dedupListS(&list.)*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
Package contains:
1. macro getvars
2. macro qgetvars
3. macro symdelglobal
4. format bool
5. format boolz
6. format ceil
7. format floor
8. format int
9. function arrfill
10. function arrfillc
11. function arrmissfill
12. function arrmissfillc
13. function arrmisstoleft
14. function arrmisstoleftc
15. function arrmisstoright
16. function arrmisstorightc
17. function catxfc
18. function catxfi
19. function catxfj
20. function catxfn
21. function deldataset
22. proto qsortincbyprocproto
23. function frommissingtonumberbs
24. function fromnumbertomissing
25. function quicksort4notmiss
26. function quicksorthash
27. function quicksorthashsddv
28. function quicksortlight
1. macro deduplistc
2. macro deduplistp
3. macro deduplists
4. macro deduplistx
5. macro getvars
6. macro qdeduplistx
7. macro qgetvars
8. macro symdelglobal
9. format bool
10. format boolz
11. format ceil
12. format floor
13. format int
14. functions arrfill
15. functions arrfillc
16. functions arrmissfill
17. functions arrmissfillc
18. functions arrmisstoleft
19. functions arrmisstoleftc
20. functions arrmisstoright
21. functions arrmisstorightc
22. functions catxfc
23. functions catxfi
24. functions catxfj
25. functions catxfn
26. functions deldataset
27. proto qsortincbyprocproto
28. functions frommissingtonumberbs
29. functions fromnumbertomissing
30. functions quicksort4notmiss
31. functions quicksorthash
32. functions quicksorthashsddv
33. functions quicksortlight
*SAS package generated by generatePackage, version 20201001*
*SAS package generated by generatePackage, version 20201018*
The SHA256 hash digest for package BasePlus:
`54232DA5E253EB58E49A09DD0DF244F433B61983D921E27F2E4FFB1EA73A5C6D`
`9549378E5F81DA4DC421C366DF006D270261852336CE3DCD88FF8E2A759938C8`
---
# Content description ############################################################################################
@@ -2131,6 +2147,312 @@ call quickSortLight(A)
---
## >>> `%dedupListS()` macro: <<< <a name="deduplists-macro"></a> #######################
The `%dedupListS()` macro deletes duplicated values from
a *SPACE separated* list of values. List, including separators,
can be no longer than a value carried by a single macrovariable.
Returned value is *unquoted*.
The `%dedupListS()` macro executes like a pure macro code.
### SYNTAX: ###################################################################
The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%dedupListS(
list of space separated values
)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**Arguments description**:
1. `list` - A list of *space separated* values.
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
**EXAMPLE 1.** Basic use-case one.
Delete duplicated values from a list.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put *%dedupListS(a b c b c)*;
%put *%dedupListS(a b,c b,c)*;
%put *%dedupListS(%str(a b c b c))*;
%put *%dedupListS(%str(a) %str(b) %str(c) b c)*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 2.** Macro variable as an argument.
Delete duplicated values from a list.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%let list = 4 5 6 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 5 6;
%put *%dedupListS(&list.)*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
## >>> `%dedupListC()` macro: <<< <a name="deduplistc-macro"></a> #######################
The `%dedupListC()` macro deletes duplicated values from
a *COMMA separated* list of values. List, including separators,
can be no longer than a value carried by a single macrovariable.
Returned value is *unquoted*. Leading and trailing spaces are ignored.
The `%dedupListC()` macro executes like a pure macro code.
### SYNTAX: ###################################################################
The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%dedupListC(
list,of,comma,separated,values
)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**Arguments description**:
1. `list` - A list of *comma separated* values.
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
**EXAMPLE 1.** Basic use-case one.
Delete duplicated values from a list.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put *%dedupListC(a,b,c,b,c)*;
%put *%dedupListC(a,b c,b c)*;
%put *%dedupListC(%str(a,b,c,b,c))*;
%put *%dedupListC(%str(a),%str(b),%str(c),b,c)*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 2.** Leading and trailing spaces are ignored.
Delete duplicated values from a list.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put *%dedupListC( a , b b , c , b b, c )*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 3.** Macro variable as an argument.
Delete duplicated values from a list.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%let list = 4, 5, 6, 1, 2, 3, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6;
%put *%dedupListC(&list.)*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
## >>> `%dedupListP()` macro: <<< <a name="deduplistp-macro"></a> #######################
The `%dedupListP()` macro deletes duplicated values from
a *PIPE(`|`) separated* list of values. List, including separators,
can be no longer than a value carried by a single macrovariable.
Returned value is *unquoted*. Leading and trailing spaces are ignored.
The `%dedupListP()` macro executes like a pure macro code.
### SYNTAX: ###################################################################
The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%dedupListP(
list|of|pipe|separated|values
)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**Arguments description**:
1. `list` - A list of *pipe separated* values.
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
**EXAMPLE 1.** Basic use-case one.
Delete duplicated values from a list.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put *%dedupListP(a|b|c|b|c)*;
%put *%dedupListP(a|b c|b c)*;
%put *%dedupListP(%str(a|b|c|b|c))*;
%put *%dedupListP(%str(a)|%str(b)|%str(c)|b|c)*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 2.** Leading and trailing spaces are ignored.
Delete duplicated values from a list.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put *%dedupListP( a | b b | c | b b| c )*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 3.** Macro variable as an argument.
Delete duplicated values from a list.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%let list = 4|5|6|1|2|3|1|2|3|4|5|6;
%put *%dedupListP(&list.)*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
## >>> `%dedupListX()` macro: <<< <a name="deduplistx-macro"></a> #######################
The `%dedupListX()` macro deletes duplicated values from
a *X separated* list of values, where the `X` represents
a *single character* separator. List, including separators,
can be no longer than a value carried by a single macrovariable.
**Caution.** The value of `X` *has to be* in **the first** byte of the list,
just after the opening bracket, i.e. `(X...)`.
Returned value is *unquoted*. Leading and trailing spaces are ignored.
The `%dedupListX()` macro executes like a pure macro code.
### SYNTAX: ###################################################################
The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%dedupListX(
XlistXofXxXseparatedXvalues
)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**Arguments description**:
1. `list` - A list of *X separated* values.
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
**EXAMPLE 1.** Basic use-case one.
Delete duplicated values from a list.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put *%dedupListX(|a|b|c|b|c)*;
%put *%dedupListX( a b c b c)*;
%put *%dedupListX(,a,b,c,b,c)*;
%put *%dedupListX(XaXbXcXbXc)*;
%put *%dedupListX(/a/b/c/b/c)*;
data _null_;
x = "%dedupListX(%str(;a;b;c;b;c))";
put x=;
run;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 2.** Leading and trailing spaces are ignored.
Delete duplicated values from a list.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put *%dedupListX(| a | b.b | c | b.b| c )*;
%put *%dedupListX(. a . b b . c . b b. c )*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 3.** Macro variable as an argument.
Delete duplicated values from a list.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%let list = 4$5.5$6$1$2$3$1$2$3$4$5.5$6;
%put *%dedupListX($&list.)*;
%let list = 4$ 5.5$ 6$ 1$ 2$ 3$ 1$ 2$ 3$ 4$ 5.5$ 6$;
%put *%dedupListX( &list.)*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
## >>> `%QdedupListX()` macro: <<< <a name="qdeduplistx-macro"></a> #######################
The `%QdedupListX()` macro deletes duplicated values from
a *X separated* list of values, where the `X` represents
a *single character* separator. List, including separators,
can be no longer than a value carried by a single macrovariable.
**Caution.** The value of `X` *has to be* in **the first** byte of the list,
just after the opening bracket, i.e. `(X...)`.
Returned value is **quoted** with `%superq()`. Leading and trailing spaces are ignored.
The `%QdedupListX()` macro executes like a pure macro code.
### SYNTAX: ###################################################################
The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%QdedupListX(
XlistXofXxXseparatedXvalues
)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**Arguments description**:
1. `list` - A list of *X separated* values.
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
**EXAMPLE 1.** Basic use-case one.
Delete duplicated values from a list.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put *%QdedupListX(|a|b|c|b|c)*;
%put *%QdedupListX( a b c b c)*;
%put *%QdedupListX(,a,b,c,b,c)*;
%put *%QdedupListX(XaXbXcXbXc)*;
%put *%QdedupListX(/a/b/c/b/c)*;
%put *%QdedupListX(%str(;a;b;c;b;c))*;
%put *%QdedupListX(%nrstr(&a&b&c&b&c))*;
%put *%QdedupListX(%nrstr(%a%b%c%b%c))*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 2.** Leading and trailing spaces are ignored.
Delete duplicated values from a list.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put *%QdedupListX(| a | b.b | c | b.b| c )*;
%put *%QdedupListX(. a . b b . c . b b. c )*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 3.** Macro variable as an argument.
Delete duplicated values from a list.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%let list = 4$5.5$6$1$2$3$1$2$3$4$5.5$6;
%put *%QdedupListX($&list.)*;
%let list = 4$ 5.5$ 6$ 1$ 2$ 3$ 1$ 2$ 3$ 4$ 5.5$ 6$;
%put *%QdedupListX( &list.)*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
## License ####################################################################
Copyright (c) 2020 Bartosz Jablonski

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View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
- [The macroArray package [ver. 0.5]](#macroarray)
- [The macroArray package](#macroarray)
- [Content description](#content-description)
* [`%appendArray()` macro](#appendarray-macro)
* [`%appendCell()` macro](#appendcell-macro)
@@ -9,11 +9,12 @@
* [`%do_over2()` macro](#do-over2-macro)
* [`%do_over3()` macro](#do-over3-macro)
* [`%make_do_over()` macro](#make-do-over-macro)
* [`%mcHashTable()` macro](#mchashtable-macro)
* [License](#license)
---
# The macroArray package [ver. 0.5] <a name="macroarray-package"></a> ###############################################
# The macroArray package [ver. 0.7] <a name="macroarray-package"></a> ###############################################
The **macroArray** package implements a macro array facility:
- `%array()`,
@@ -21,7 +22,8 @@ The **macroArray** package implements a macro array facility:
- `%make_do_over()`,
- `%deletemacarray()`,
- `%concatarrays()`,
- `%appendcell()`.
- `%appendcell()`,
- `%mcHashTable()`,
- etc.
The set of macros, which emulates classic
@@ -47,23 +49,24 @@ to verify the following options:
---
Package contains:
1. macro appendarray
2. macro appendcell
3. macro array
4. macro concatarrays
5. macro deletemacarray
6. macro do_over
7. macro do_over2
8. macro do_over3
9. macro make_do_over
1. macro appendarray
2. macro appendcell
3. macro array
4. macro concatarrays
5. macro deletemacarray
6. macro do_over
7. macro do_over2
8. macro do_over3
9. macro make_do_over
10. macro mchashtable
Required SAS Components:
*Base SAS Software*
*SAS package generated by generatePackage, version 20200911*
*SAS package generated by generatePackage, version 20201018.*
The SHA256 hash digest for package macroArray:
`085A0F3D544EAF01378BB6C6B4F429123F8BFEEFC76013D1B05DFADFEE3FA661`
`75056F508E96296DC50096BBB054C58334DB913AD37885958099EDCE0C330CB2`
---
# Content description ############################################################################################
@@ -306,7 +309,12 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
or when used with second parameter equal `I` (insert) allow to overwrite macroarrays
value:
`%let %myArr(17,i) = 42;`
If set to `M` then for a given array name the macro symbols table is scanned for
macrovariables with prefix like the array name and numeric suffixes,
then the minimum and the maximum index is determined
and all not existing global macrovariables are created and
a macro is generated in the same way as for the `Y` value
* `ds=` - *Optional*, use a dataset as a basis for a macroarray data,
if used by default overwrites use of the `array` parameter, honors `macarray=`
argument, dataset options are allowed, e.g. `sashelp.class(obs=5)`
@@ -570,6 +578,19 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
%array(ds = sashelp.cars(obs=100 where=(Cylinders=6)), vars = Make| Type| Model, macarray=Y)
%put *%make(&makeLBOUND.)*%Model(2)*%Model(3)*%Model(4)*%type(&typeHBOUND.)*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 13.** Creating an array and macro from existing list of macrovariables
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%let myTest3 = 13;
%let myTest6 = 16;
%let myTest9 = 19;
%array(myTest, macarray=M)
%do_over(myTest, phrase = %nrstr(%put *&_I_.*%myTest(&_I_.)*;))
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
@@ -1088,7 +1109,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 3.** Create a "4-loop" `%DO_OVER4()` macro
**EXAMPLE 2.** Create a "4-loop" `%DO_OVER4()` macro
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%make_do_over(4);
@@ -1143,6 +1164,361 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
## >>> `%mcHashTable()` macro: <<< <a name="mchashtable-macro"></a> #######################
The `%mcHashTable()` macro provided in the package
is designed to facilitate the idea of a "macro hash table"
concept, i.e. *a list of macrovariables with common prefix
and suffixes generated as a hash digest* which allows
to use values other than integers as indexes.
The `%mcHashTable()` macro allows to generate other macros
which behaves like hash tables or dictionaries. See examples below.
The `%mcHashTable()` macro executes like a pure macro code.
### SYNTAX: ###################################################################
The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%mcHashTable(
H
<,METHOD>
<,HASH=>
)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**Arguments description**:
1. `H` - *Required*, a hash table macro name and a declaration/definition,
e.g. `mcHashTable(HT)`. It names a macro which is generated by
the `%mcHashTable()` macro. Provided name cannot be empty
or an underscore (`_`). No longer than *16* characters.
2. `METHOD` - *Optional*, if empty (or DECLARE or DCL) then the code of
a macro hash table is compiled.
If `DELETE` then the macro hash table named by `H` and all
macrovariables named like "`&H._`" are deleted.
* `HASH=` - *Optional*, indicates which hashing algorithms should be used,
available values are `CRC32` or `MD5`, the `CRC32` is the default.
---
### THE CREATED MACRO `%&H.()`: ####################################################
The created macro imitates behaviour of a hash table or a dictionary.
It is *not* dedicated for "long-ish" lists (above 1000 elements) since
the performance may be poor.
The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%&H.(
METHOD
<,KEY=>
<,DATA=>
)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**Arguments description**:
1. `METHOD` - *Required*, indicate what behaviour should be executed.
Allowed values are:
- `ADD`, adds key and data portion to the macro hash table,
*multiple data portions* are available for one key.
- `FIND`, tests if given key exists in the macro hash table
and, if yes, returns data value associated with the key.
For multiple data portions see the `data=` parameter.
- `DP` (data portion) or `CHECK`, returns the number of data
portions for a given key.
- `CLEAR` removes all data and keys values.
- `KEYIDX`, allows to get data by the key index rather than value.
- `KEYVAL`, returns key value for a given key index.
- `CHECKIDX`, returns the number of data portions for
a given key index.
* `KEY=` - *Optional*, provides key value for `ADD`, `FIND`,`DP`, `CHECK`
`CHECKIDX`, `KEYIDX`, and `KEYVAL` methods. Leading and trimming
spaces are removed from the value.
The `hashing(CRC32,...)` function or the `MD5(...)` function is
used to generate the hash.
* `DATA=` - *Optional*, provides data value for the `ADD` method and
for the`FIND` method provides data portion number to be
extracted. Default value is `1` (used by the `FIND` method).
When macro is executed and when data are added the following types of
*global* macrovariables are created:
- `&H._########`,
- `&H._########_Xk`,
- `&H._########_Xi`,
- `&H._########_Xi_j`,
- `&H._KEYNUM`,
- and `&H._KEY_i`.
The `#` represents value generated by the `hashing(CRC32,...)` function
or the `MD5(...)` function for the given key.
The first type keeps information about possible collision for the key.
The second type keeps information about value of a given key,
the `X` keeps the track of other colliding keys.
The third type keeps information about number of data portions
for given key, the `X` keeps the track of other colliding keys.
The fourth type keeps the data portion, the `j` indicates data portion number.
The fifth type keeps the number of unique values of the key.
The sixth type keeps the list of unique values of the key,
the `i` indicates key number.
See examples below to see use cases.
---
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
**EXAMPLE 1.** Basic use-case.
Creating macro hash table, macro `HT` is generated.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%mcHashTable(HT)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Add elements to the `HT`.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%HT(ADD,key=x,data=17)
%HT(ADD,key=y,data=42)
%HT(ADD,key=z,data=303)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Add some duplicates for the key x.
See macrovariables created.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%HT(ADD,key=x,data=18)
%HT(ADD,key=x,data=19)
%put _user_;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Check the number od data portions in macrohash
for the key `x` and non existing key `t`.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put ##%HT(DP,key=x)##;
%put ##%HT(DP,key=t)##;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Check the number od data portions in macrohash
for the key index 1 and 4.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put ##%HT(CHECKIDX,key=1)##;
%put ##%HT(CHECKIDX,key=4)##;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Prints first data values for various keys.
Key `t` does not exist in the macrohash.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put #%HT(FIND,key=x)#;
%put #%HT(FIND,key=y)#;
%put #%HT(FIND,key=z)#;
%put #%HT(FIND,key=t)#;
%put #%HT(FIND,key=x,data=2)#;
%put #%HT(FIND,key=x,data=3)#;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Print first and subsequent data values
for a given KeyIDX. Index `4` does not exist.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put #%HT(KEYIDX,key=1)#;
%put #%HT(KEYIDX,key=2)#;
%put #%HT(KEYIDX,key=3)#;
%put #%HT(KEYIDX,key=4)#;
%put #%HT(KEYIDX,key=1,data=2)#;
%put #%HT(KEYIDX,key=1,data=3)#;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Print the key values for a given KeyIDX.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put #%HT(KEYVAL,key=1)#;
%put #%HT(KEYVAL,key=2)#;
%put #%HT(KEYVAL,key=3)#;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Clear and delete macro hash table `HT`.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%HT(CLEAR)
%mcHashTable(HT,DELETE)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 2.** Combine `CHECK` and `FIND` methods
with macros `%array()` and `%do_over()`
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%mcHashTable(H)
%H(ADD,key=x,data=17)
%H(ADD,key=x,data=18)
%H(ADD,key=x,data=19)
%array(A[%H(CHECK,key=x)]);
%put %do_over(A, phrase=%nrstr(
%H(FIND,key=x,data=&_i_)
), between = %str(,));
%mcHashTable(H,delete)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 2.** Populate macro hash table from a dataset.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%mcHashTable(CLASS)
%let t = %sysfunc(datetime());
data _null_;
set sashelp.class;
call execute('%CLASS(ADD,key=' !! name !! ',data=' !! age !! ')');
call execute('%CLASS(ADD,key=' !! name !! ',data=' !! weight !! ')');
call execute('%CLASS(ADD,key=' !! name !! ',data=' !! height !! ')');
run;
%put t = %sysevalf(%sysfunc(datetime()) - &t.);
%put _user_;
%CLASS(CLEAR)
%mcHashTable(CARS)
%let t = %sysfunc(datetime());
data _null_;
set sashelp.cars;
call execute('%CARS(ADD,key=' !! catx("|",make,model) !! ',data=' !! MPG_CITY !! ')');
run;
%put t = %sysevalf(%sysfunc(datetime()) - &t.);
%* %put _user_;
%CARS(CLEAR)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 3.** Data portion may require quoting and un-quoting..
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%mcHashTable(CODE)
%CODE(CLEAR)
%CODE(ADD,key=data, data=%str(data test; x = 42; run;))
%CODE(ADD,key=proc, data=%str(proc print; run;))
%CODE(ADD,key=macro,data=%nrstr(%put *****;))
%CODE(FIND,key=data)
%CODE(FIND,key=proc)
%unquote(%CODE(FIND,key=macro))
%mcHashTable(CODE,DELETE)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 4.** Longer lists.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%let size = 1000;
%mcHashTable(AAA)
%mcHashTable(BBB)
%mcHashTable(CCC)
%mcHashTable(DDD)
%let t = %sysfunc(datetime());
data _null_;
do i = 1 to &size.;
call execute(cats('%AAA(ADD,key=A', i, ',data=', i, ')'));
end;
run;
%put t = %sysevalf(%sysfunc(datetime()) - &t.);
%put &=AAA_KEYSNUM;
%AAA(CLEAR)
%let t = %sysfunc(datetime());
data _null_;
do i = 1 to &size.;
call execute(cats('%BBB(ADD,key=B', i, ',data=', i, ')'));
call execute(cats('%BBB(ADD,key=B', i, ',data=', i+1, ')'));
end;
run;
%put t = %sysevalf(%sysfunc(datetime()) - &t.);
%put &=BBB_KEYSNUM;
%BBB(CLEAR)
%let t = %sysfunc(datetime());
data _null_;
t= datetime();
do i = 1 to &size.;
call execute(cats('%CCC(ADD,key=C', i, ',data=', i, ')'));
end;
t = datetime() - t;
put t=;
t= datetime();
do i = 1 to &size.;
call execute(cats('%CCC(ADD,key=C', i, ',data=', i+1, ')'));
end;
t = datetime() - t;
put t=;
run;
%put t = %sysevalf(%sysfunc(datetime()) - &t.);
%let t = %sysfunc(datetime());
data test;
do i = 1 to &size.;
x = resolve(cats('%CCC(FIND,key=C', i, ',data=1)'));
y = resolve(cats('%CCC(FIND,key=C', i, ',data=2)'));
output;
end;
run;
%put t = %sysevalf(%sysfunc(datetime()) - &t.);
%put &=CCC_KEYSNUM;
%CCC(CLEAR)
%let t = %sysfunc(datetime());
data _null_;
do i = 1 to &size.;
call execute(cats('%DDD(ADD,key=D,data=', i, ')'));
end;
run;
%put t = %sysevalf(%sysfunc(datetime()) - &t.);
%put &=DDD_KEYSNUM;
%put %DDD(CHECK,key=D);
%DDD(CLEAR)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 5.** Forbidden names.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%mcHashTable()
%mcHashTable(_)
%mcHashTable(ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQ) %* bad;
%mcHashTable(ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOP) %* good;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 5.** Hashing algorithms.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%mcHashTable(H1,DCL,HASH=MD5)
%mcHashTable(H2,DECLARE,HASH=CRC32)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
## License ####################################################################
Copyright (c) Bartosz Jablonski, since January 2019

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packages/macrocore.zip Normal file

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@@ -49,7 +49,7 @@ Required SAS Components:
*SAS package generated by generatePackage, version 20200911*
The SHA256 hash digest for package SQLinDS:
`D76B85EFF129678B45233FB397A2BDB8D23F234013BD821D55141CA18DD5589E`
`135DC50C0412B8CEAF6D5349B8A203C0ADB23D4F5C2680B6A35FD2E5482B6C49`
---
# Content description ############################################################################################

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