8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
SASPAC - SAS Packages Archive
ab783382a8 Merge pull request #37 from SASPAC/dev
The BasePlus package [ver. 1.40.0]
2024-06-06 22:20:35 +02:00
Bart Jablonski
2e561a79ae The BasePlus package [ver. 1.40.0]
## The BasePlus package [ver. 1.40.0]

### Changes:

Update to the
[`%rainCloudPlot()`](https://github.com/SASPAC/baseplus/blob/1.40.0/baseplus.md#raincloudplot-macro-17)
macro, new parameter:
- `boxPlotLineSize=`
- `boxPlotFill=`
- `xBothAxis=`
- `minRange=`
- `maxRange=`

See [documentation](https://github.com/SASPAC/baseplus/blob/main/baseplus.md) for details.

---

SHA256 digest for BasePlus: `F*BD0333B92D7CB639A136CD4994DE0C63F8396E449E45BC714D71D2E15318F42D`

---
2024-06-06 22:16:31 +02:00
SASPAC - SAS Packages Archive
c88e524d3d Merge pull request #36 from SASPAC/dev
The BasePlus package [ver. 1.39.0]
2024-05-29 16:44:04 +02:00
Bart Jablonski
f9fa786ab3 The BasePlus package [ver. 1.39.0]
The BasePlus package [ver. 1.39.0]

Changes:
- new parameter `DSout=` added in `%downloadFilesTo()` macro,

---

File SHA256: `F*3C3A2050E3FF46E1FC0F936634A66FC3F294A3531EFE0A7DC9CE74F2EF17C687` for this version.
2024-05-29 16:36:44 +02:00
SASPAC - SAS Packages Archive
3aaf69ebab Merge pull request #35 from SASPAC/dev
The BasePlus package [ver. 1.38.0]
2024-03-12 14:46:39 +01:00
SASPAC - SAS Packages Archive
1d474a79e4 Merge branch 'main' into dev 2024-03-12 14:46:26 +01:00
Bart Jablonski
9b9d9dea38 The BasePlus package [ver. 1.38.0]
The BasePlus package [ver. 1.38.0]

Update to the `%rainCloudPlot()` macro, new parameter for "vertical" plots added.

Documentation updated and "cleaned".

---

SHA256 digest for BasePlus: `F*209FB8198270DEAB6151CE31391A352A065B4EE2689F40433FA9550A7F4AAC18`

---
2024-03-12 14:42:32 +01:00
Bart Jablonski
21316add63 The BasePlus package [ver. 1.37.0]
## The BasePlus package [ver. 1.37.0]

Changes:

- Update to the %rainCloudPlot() macro.
- New macro %iffunc() added.
- Documentation updated.

---

SHA256 digest for BasePlus: F*8155BFE82F7833E4B0DA24D81DBDFC58463906D6032B1F0161772DADE84BE790

---
2024-03-10 08:27:52 +01:00
31 changed files with 21310 additions and 84 deletions

View File

@@ -54,7 +54,7 @@ libname NEW "%workPath()/new";
```
and more.
SHA256 digest for the latest version of `BasePlus`: F*8155BFE82F7833E4B0DA24D81DBDFC58463906D6032B1F0161772DADE84BE790
SHA256 digest for the latest version of `BasePlus`: F*BD0333B92D7CB639A136CD4994DE0C63F8396E449E45BC714D71D2E15318F42D
[**Documentation for BasePlus**](./baseplus.md "Documentation for BasePlus")

View File

@@ -1,28 +1,30 @@
# Documentation for the `BasePlus` package.
---
### Version information:
----------------------------------------------------------------
*The BASE SAS plus a bunch of functionalities I am missing in BASE SAS*
----------------------------------------------------------------
### Version information:
- Package: BasePlus
- Version: 1.37.0
- Generated: 2024-03-09T13:28:58
- Version: 1.40.0
- Generated: 2024-06-06T21:47:12
- Author(s): Bartosz Jablonski (yabwon@gmail.com), Quentin McMullen (qmcmullen@gmail.com)
- Maintainer(s): Bartosz Jablonski (yabwon@gmail.com)
- License: MIT
- File SHA256: `F*8155BFE82F7833E4B0DA24D81DBDFC58463906D6032B1F0161772DADE84BE790` for this version
- Content SHA256: `C*7A4A85EB6C2C23E6A171DDCD8F61D7ED40E9A6751F9579DF893E148A95FFE188` for this version
- File SHA256: `F*BD0333B92D7CB639A136CD4994DE0C63F8396E449E45BC714D71D2E15318F42D` for this version
- Content SHA256: `C*A35E716739EC4FF9767C363E840458FB7D5212605982276632F59FD26AB43594` for this version
---
# The `BasePlus` package, version: `1.37.0`;
# The `BasePlus` package, version: `1.40.0`;
---
# The BasePlus package [ver. 1.37.0] <a name="baseplus-package"></a> ###############################################
# The BasePlus package [ver. 1.40.0] <a name="baseplus-package"></a> ###############################################
The **BasePlus** package implements useful
functions and functionalities I miss in the BASE SAS.
@@ -349,7 +351,7 @@ run;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 26** Downloading data from the internet to a local dirrectory:
**EXAMPLE 26** Downloading data from the internet to a local directory:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%downloadFilesTo(~/directoryA)
datalines4;
@@ -362,7 +364,7 @@ run;
**EXAMPLE 27** Conditional value assignment:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%let x = A B C;
%let y = %iffunc((%scan(&x.,1)=A),Stats with "A"., Does not start with "A".);
%let y = %iffunc((%scan(&x.,1)=A),Starts with "A"., Does not start with "A".);
%put &=y.;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -382,7 +384,7 @@ localization (only if additional content was deployed during the installation pr
--------------------------------------------------------------------
*SAS package generated by SAS Package Framework, version `20231210`*
*SAS package generated by SAS Package Framework, version `20240529`*
--------------------------------------------------------------------
@@ -464,9 +466,7 @@ The `BasePlus` package consists of the following content:
74. [`%translate()` macro ](#translate-macro-74 )
75. [`%tranwrd()` macro ](#tranwrd-macro-75 )
76. [`%workpath()` macro ](#workpath-macro-76 )
95. [License note](#license)
77. [License note](#license)
---
@@ -516,7 +516,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
## >>> `%dedupListC()` macro: <<< <a name="deduplistc-macro"></a> #######################
The `%dedupListC()` macro deletes duplicated values from
a *COMMA separated* list of values. List, including separators,
a *COMMA-separated* list of values. List, including separators,
can be no longer than a value carried by a single macro variable.
Returned value is *unquoted*. Leading and trailing spaces are ignored.
@@ -534,7 +534,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
**Arguments description**:
1. `list` - A list of *comma separated* values.
1. `list` - A list of *comma-separated* values.
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
@@ -577,7 +577,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
## >>> `%dedupListP()` macro: <<< <a name="deduplistp-macro"></a> #######################
The `%dedupListP()` macro deletes duplicated values from
a *PIPE(`|`) separated* list of values. List, including separators,
a *PIPE(`|`)-separated* list of values. List, including separators,
can be no longer than a value carried by a single macro variable.
Returned value is *unquoted*. Leading and trailing spaces are ignored.
@@ -595,7 +595,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
**Arguments description**:
1. `list` - A list of *pipe separated* values.
1. `list` - A list of *pipe-separated* values.
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
@@ -638,7 +638,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
## >>> `%dedupListS()` macro: <<< <a name="deduplists-macro"></a> #######################
The `%dedupListS()` macro deletes duplicated values from
a *SPACE separated* list of values. List, including separators,
a *SPACE-separated* list of values. List, including separators,
can be no longer than a value carried by a single macro variable.
Returned value is *unquoted*.
@@ -650,13 +650,13 @@ The `%dedupListS()` macro executes like a pure macro code.
The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%dedupListS(
list of space separated values
list of space-separated values
)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**Arguments description**:
1. `list` - A list of *space separated* values.
1. `list` - A list of *space-separated* values.
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
@@ -692,7 +692,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
## >>> `%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 *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 macro variable.
@@ -714,7 +714,7 @@ XlistXofXxXseparatedXvalues
**Arguments description**:
1. `list` - A list of *X separated* values.
1. `list` - A list of *X-separated* values.
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
@@ -773,7 +773,7 @@ and subdirectories of a given `root` directory.
The extracted info may be just a list of files and subdirectories or, if
the `details=` parameter is set to 1, additional operating system information
is extracted (information is OSS dependent and gives different results for Linux
is extracted (information is OS-dependent and gives different results for Linux
and for Windows)
The extracted info can be narrowed down to files (`keepFiles=1`) or to
@@ -835,7 +835,8 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
in long format, `1` = yes, `0` = no.
* `fileExt=` - *Optional*, if not missing then indicates
file extension to filter out results.
a list of space-separated file extensions
to filter out results.
* `maxDepth=0` - *Optional*, if not zero then indicates
maximum depth of search in the root path.
@@ -1093,12 +1094,12 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
%put *%str(%')%bquote(%getVars(sashelp.class,sep=''))%str(%')*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
c) coma separated double quote list:
c) comma-separated double quote list:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put *"%getVars(sashelp.class,sep=%str(", "))"*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
d) coma separated single quote list:
d) comma-separated single quote list:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put *%str(%')%getVars(sashelp.class,sep=', ')%str(%')*;
%let x = %str(%')%getVars(sashelp.class,sep=', ')%str(%');
@@ -1163,12 +1164,12 @@ a) one single or double qiote:
%put *%QgetVars(sashelp.class,quote='')*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
c) coma separated double quote list:
c) comma-separated double quote list:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put *%getVars(sashelp.class,sep=%str(,),quote=%str(%"))*;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
d) coma separated single quote list:
d) comma-separated single quote list:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%let x = %getVars(sashelp.class,sep=%str(,),quote=%str(%'));
%put &=x.;
@@ -1546,8 +1547,8 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The text string is concider as *"only dataset name"*, i.e. macro does not
assume it contain library as prefix or data set options as sufix.
The text string is consider as *"only dataset name"*, i.e. macro does not
assume it contain library as prefix or data set options as suffix.
See the `%LDSN()` macro for comparison.
---
@@ -1778,7 +1779,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
## >>> `%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 *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 macro variable.
@@ -1800,7 +1801,7 @@ XlistXofXxXseparatedXvalues
**Arguments description**:
1. `list` - A list of *X separated* values.
1. `list` - A list of *X-separated* values.
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
@@ -1910,9 +1911,9 @@ See examples in `%getVars()` help for the details.
The zipEvalf() and QzipEvalf() macro functions
allow to use a function on elements of pair of
space separated lists.
space-separated lists.
For two space separated lists of text strings the corresponding
For two space-separated lists of text strings the corresponding
elements are taken and the macro applies a function, provided by user,
to calculate result of the function on taken elements.
@@ -1944,9 +1945,9 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
**Arguments description**:
1. `first` - *Required*, a space separated list of texts.
1. `first` - *Required*, a space-separated list of texts.
2. `second` - *Required*, a space separated list of texts.
2. `second` - *Required*, a space-separated list of texts.
* `function = cat` - *Optional*, default value is `cat`,
a function which will be applied
@@ -1963,18 +1964,18 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
* `argBf =` - *Optional*, default value is empty,
arguments of the function inserted
*before* elements the first list.
If multiple should be comma separated.
If multiple should be comma-separated.
* `argMd =` - *Optional*, default value is empty,
arguments of the function inserted
*between* elements the first list and
the second list.
If multiple should be comma separated.
If multiple should be comma-separated.
* `argAf =` - *Optional*, default value is empty,
arguments of the function inserted
*after* elements the second list.
If multiple should be comma separated.
If multiple should be comma-separated.
* `format=` - *Optional*, default value is empty,
indicates a format which should be used
@@ -1995,8 +1996,8 @@ See examples in `%zipEvalf()` help for the details.
## >>> `%RainCloudPlot()` macro: <<< <a name="raincloudplot-macro"></a> #######################
The RainCloudPlot() macro allow to plot Rain Cloud plots, i.e. pots of
kernel density estimates, jitter data values, and box-and-whiskers plot.
The RainCloudPlot() macro allow to plot Rain Cloud plots, i.e.
plots of kernel density estimates, jitter data values, and box-and-whiskers plot.
See examples below for the details.
@@ -2015,6 +2016,8 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
<,roundFactor=>
<,rainDropSize=>
<,boxPlotSymbolSize=>
<,boxPlotLineSize=>
<,boxPlotFill=>
<,colorsList=>
<,monochrome=>
<,antialiasMax=>
@@ -2022,6 +2025,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
<,footnote=>
<,catLabels=>
<,xLabels=>
<,xBothAxis=>
<,catLabelPos=>
<,xLabelPos=>
<,catLabelAttrs=>
@@ -2043,6 +2047,8 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
<,KERNEL_K=>
<,KERNEL_C=>
<,VSCALEmax=>
<,minRange=>
<,maxRange=>
<,cleanTempData=>
<,codePreview=>
@@ -2086,6 +2092,17 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
* `boxPlotSymbolSize` - *Optional*, default value `8px`.
Size of symbols on the box plot.
If two values are provided, e.g., `16px 8px`,
the first is used for diamond size (the mean),
the second for "min/max" bars.
* `boxPlotLineSize` - *Optional*, default value `1px`.
Thickness of lines of the box plot.
* `boxPlotFill` - *Optional*, default value `1`.
Transparency of the box plot.
Ranges from 0.0 (opaque) to 1.0 (full translucent).
* `colorsList` - *Optional*, default value is empty.
List of colours for plotting.
@@ -2116,6 +2133,10 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
When empty a data variable name is used.
For details see notes below.
* `xBothAxis` - *Optional*, default value is `1`.
Indicates if both (top and bootom) axis (horizontal) should be printed.
If not `1` then only bottom axis is displayed.
* `catLabelPos` - *Optional*, default value `DATACENTER`.
Indicates position of the label on group axis (vertical).
Allowed values are `BOTTOM`, `CENTER`, `DATACENTER`, and `TOP`.
@@ -2139,7 +2160,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
Indicates if the right vertical axis should be displayed.
* `y2axisLevels` - *Optional*, default value `4`.
Indicates if the number of expected levels of values printed
Sets the number of expected levels of values printed
on the right vertical axis.
* `y2axisValueAttrs` - *Optional*, default value `Color=Grey`.
@@ -2174,6 +2195,12 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
By default only the: `width=`, `height=`, and `antialiasmax=`
are modified.
* `vertical` - *Optional*, default value is `0`.
Set value to `1` to plot "clouds & boxes" vertically.
**NOTE:** *Before setting the parameter to `1`, first
prepare the plot in the "horizontal" version since all
other parameters assume that orientation(!) and then are
converted accordingly.*
***Stat related options***:
@@ -2200,6 +2227,14 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
for `VSCALE=PROPORTION` between 0 and 1, and
for `VSCALE=COUNT` between 0 and N (sample size).
* `minRange` - *Optional*, default value is `.` (numerical missing).
Indicates minimum value for x-axis on the plot, by default calculated form data.
Is a global parameter used for all plots.
* `maxRange` - *Optional*, default value is `.` (numerical missing).
Indicates maximum value for x-axis on the plot, by default calculated form data.
Is a global parameter used for all plots.
***Other options***:
* `cleanTempData` - *Optional*, default value `1`.
@@ -2222,10 +2257,10 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
Use the `%str()` or `%nrstr()` macro-function to handle special characters.
The `%unquote()` is used when resolving the parameter.
* The `catLabels` and `xLabels` should be quoted comma separated lists enclosed with brackets,
* The `catLabels` and `xLabels` should be quoted comma-separated lists enclosed with brackets,
e.g. `catLabels=("Continent of Origin", "Car Type")`, see Example below.
* The `catLabelAttrs` and `xLabelAttrs` should be space separated lists of `key=value` pairs,
* The `catLabelAttrs` and `xLabelAttrs` should be space-separated lists of `key=value` pairs,
e.g. `xLabelAttrs=size=12 color=Pink weight=bold`, see Example below.
* Kernel density estimates and basic statistics are calculated with `PROC UNIVARIATE`.
@@ -2236,6 +2271,10 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
* SAS notes (`NOTE:`) are disabled for the execution time.
* Before setting the `vertical=` parameter to `1`, first prepare the plot
in the "horizontal" version since all other parameters assume that orientation(!)
and then are converted accordingly.
* List of predefined colours is:
`BlueViolet`, `RoyalBlue`, `OliveDrab`, `Gold`, `HotPink`, `Crimson`,
`MediumPurple`, `CornflowerBlue`, `YellowGreen`, `Goldenrod`, `Orchid`, `IndianRed`.
@@ -2389,6 +2428,35 @@ The output can be seen in the `md` file.
The output can be seen in the `md` file.
![Example 3](./baseplus_RainCloudPlot_Ex3.png)
**EXAMPLE 4.** Rain Cloud plot for `sashelp.cars` dataset
with groups by Drive Train for Weight (LBS)
variable ploted "vertically":
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%RainCloudPlot(
sashelp.cars
, DriveTrain
, Weight
, HeightPX=400
, colorslist=Red Green Blue
, y2axisLevels=5
, catLabels=("DriveTrain")
, xLabels="Weight (LBS)"
, xLabelAttrs=size=12 color=Black weight=bold
, y2axisLines=1
, vscale=percent
, vscalemax=50
, vertical = 1
, title = %nrstr(title1 J=C HEIGHT=3 "The VERTICAL plotting is cool, ...";)
, footnote = %nrstr(footnote1 J=L HEIGHT=2 "... isn't it?";)
)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The output can be seen in the `md` file.
![Example 4](./baseplus_RainCloudPlot_Ex4.png)
---
@@ -2722,7 +2790,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
## >>> `%unzipArch()` macro: <<< <a name="unziparch-macro"></a> #######################
The unzipArch() macro allows to unzip content of a ZIP archive.
Macro is OS independent, the `XCMD` option is not required.
Macro is OS-independent, the `XCMD` option is not required.
The `dlCreateDir` option is used under the hood.
@@ -2955,7 +3023,7 @@ run;
## >>> `%zipArch()` macro: <<< <a name="ziparch-macro"></a> #######################
The zipArch() macro allows to ZIP content of a directory.
Macro is OS independent, the `XCMD` option is not required.
Macro is OS-independent, the `XCMD` option is not required.
Content of zipped archive can be listed in the log.
@@ -3092,9 +3160,9 @@ run;
The zipEvalf() and QzipEvalf() macro functions
allow to use a function on elements of pair of
space separated lists.
space-separated lists.
For two space separated lists of text strings the corresponding
For two space-separated lists of text strings the corresponding
elements are taken and the macro applies a function, provided by user,
to calculate result of the function on taken elements.
@@ -3126,9 +3194,9 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
**Arguments description**:
1. `first` - *Required*, a space separated list of texts.
1. `first` - *Required*, a space-separated list of texts.
2. `second` - *Required*, a space separated list of texts.
2. `second` - *Required*, a space-separated list of texts.
* `function = cat` - *Optional*, default value is `cat`,
a function which will be applied
@@ -3145,18 +3213,18 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
* `argBf =` - *Optional*, default value is empty,
arguments of the function inserted
*before* elements the first list.
If multiple should be comma separated.
If multiple should be comma-separated.
* `argMd =` - *Optional*, default value is empty,
arguments of the function inserted
*between* elements the first list and
the second list.
If multiple should be comma separated.
If multiple should be comma-separated.
* `argAf =` - *Optional*, default value is empty,
arguments of the function inserted
*after* elements the second list.
If multiple should be comma separated.
If multiple should be comma-separated.
* `format=` - *Optional*, default value is empty,
indicates a format which should be used
@@ -5388,11 +5456,13 @@ Macro can be executed in two possible ways:
run;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2) by create a dataset with a list of links and use of `DS=` and `DSvar=` parameters.
2) by create a dataset with a list of links and use of `DS=`, `DSvar=`,
and `DSout=` parameters:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%downloadFilesTo(</path/to/target/directory>
, DS=<dataset with list>
, DSvar=<variable with list>
, DSout=<variable with names for downloaded files>
)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -5410,6 +5480,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
target
<,DS=>
<,DSvar=link>
<,DSout=scan(link,-1,"/\")>
<,inDev=URL>
<,outDev=DISK>
<,inOptions=>
@@ -5428,6 +5499,10 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
*. `DSvar= ` - *Optional*, name of variable in data set
with list of files to download.
*. `DSout=` - *Optional*, name of variable in data set
with list of names for to downloaded files.
Default value is: `scan(link,-1,"/\")` it is
an expression to cut last part of the link.
*. `inDev=` - *Optional*, type of device used by the
`filename()` function to access incoming files.
@@ -5451,8 +5526,8 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
**EXAMPLE 1.** Download data from web with diect list and then copy between directories:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
**EXAMPLE 1.** Download data from web with direct list and then copy between directories:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
resetline;
%downloadFilesTo(~/directoryA)
datalines4;
@@ -5467,11 +5542,11 @@ datalines4;
~/directoryA/WUSS-2023-Paper-189.zip
;;;;
run;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 2.** Download data from web using data set with list:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
resetline;
data listOfFiles;
infile cards;
@@ -5483,7 +5558,7 @@ https://www.lexjansen.com/wuss/2023/WUSS-2023-Paper-109.pdf
run;
%downloadFilesTo(R:\directoryC, DS=listOfFiles, DSvar=files)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
@@ -5759,7 +5834,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
1. `number` - *Optional*, default value is empty,
indicates numbers of titles to be extracted.
Space separated list is expected.
Space-separated list is expected.
If empty or `_ALL_` extract all non-missing.
*. `type` - *Optional*, default value is `T`.
@@ -5918,7 +5993,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
**EXAMPLE 4.** Macro-Functions works too:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%let x = A B C;
%put %iffunc((%scan(&x.,1)=A),Stats with "A"., Does not start with "A".);
%put %iffunc((%scan(&x.,1)=A),Starts with "A"., Does not start with "A".);
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -6126,7 +6201,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
**EXAMPLE 1.** Space separated list of capital letters from A to Z:
**EXAMPLE 1.** Space-separated list of capital letters from A to Z:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%put %letters(1:26:1);
@@ -6624,9 +6699,9 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
**Arguments description**:
1. `list` - *Required*, a list of elements to be repeated.
List can be space or comma separated.
List can be space or comma-separated.
Elements can be in quotes.
For comma separated list add brackets
For comma-separated list add brackets
e.g., `%repList((A,B,C,D),times=5)`.
The list separators are: `<{[( ,;)]}>`.

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