14 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
SASPAC - SAS Packages Archive
817fa27b6b Merge pull request #40 from SASPAC/dev
The BasePlus package [ver. 1.42.1]
2024-07-19 10:33:21 +02:00
Bart Jablonski
bc7b2b5ee8 The BasePlus package [ver. 1.42.1]
## The BasePlus package [ver. 1.42.1]

### Changes:

Update to the
[`%rainCloudPlot()`](https://github.com/SASPAC/baseplus/blob/1.42.1/baseplus.md#raincloudplot-macro-17)
macro, input parameters checks added.

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

---

SHA256 digest for BasePlus: `F*2129F372D72A34A4FB1F368A581EA33D64AD4D8F3707213D5B9553F3C3122003`

---
2024-07-19 10:29:38 +02:00
SASPAC - SAS Packages Archive
94ec410027 Merge pull request #39 from SASPAC/dev
The BasePlus package [ver. 1.42.0]
2024-07-10 23:10:40 +02:00
Bart Jablonski
95a0f71940 The BasePlus package [ver. 1.42.0]
## The BasePlus package [ver. 1.42.0]

### Changes:

New macro
[`%GenerateOneLiners()`](https://github.com/SASPAC/baseplus/blob/1.42.0/baseplus.md#generateoneliners-macro)
allowing to generate "one liner" functions of the form:

~~~~sas
%macro FUNCTION()/parmbuff;
%sysfunc(FUNCTION&syspbuff)
%mend FUNCTION;
~~~~

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

---

SHA256 digest for BasePlus: `F*6012D1475AE22A4445C032D8EAE092BE515D8CD2AE390CC087F5987ACB8BCB13`

---

### Example

~~~~sas
%GenerateOneLiners(
  listOfFunctions=SUM MEAN MEDIAN VAR
, prefix=_)

%put
  %_SUM(1,2,3,4,5,6)
  %_MEAN(1,2,3,4,5,6)
  %_MEDIAN(1,2,3,4,5,6)
  %_VAR(1,2,3,4,5,6)
;
~~~~
2024-07-10 23:07:23 +02:00
SASPAC - SAS Packages Archive
3cecb0a5c0 Merge pull request #38 from SASPAC/dev
The BasePlus package [ver. 1.41.0]
2024-06-09 18:54:18 +02:00
Bart Jablonski
d52e0cf147 The BasePlus package [ver. 1.41.0]
## The BasePlus package [ver. 1.41.0]

### Changes:

Update to the
[`%rainCloudPlot()`](https://github.com/SASPAC/baseplus/blob/1.41.0/baseplus.md#raincloudplot-macro-17)
macro, new parameter:
 - `meanShiftLine=`
 - `meanShiftStep=`
 - `meanShiftColors=`
 - `xaxisValues=`
 - `xaxisValuesDisplay=`
 - `xaxisValuesFormat=`
 - `xaxisValuesRotate=`
 - `xaxisOther=`
 - `reuseN=`

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

---

SHA256 digest for BasePlus: `F*6760DDF382E7CA9A1291F028FA7F2BACB68A3D31CEA3A85104E13EA08645AEF1`

---
2024-06-09 18:51:00 +02:00
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
58 changed files with 43111 additions and 109 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*2129F372D72A34A4FB1F368A581EA33D64AD4D8F3707213D5B9553F3C3122003
[**Documentation for BasePlus**](./baseplus.md "Documentation for BasePlus")

View File

@@ -1,28 +1,30 @@
# Documentation for the `BasePlus` package.
---
----------------------------------------------------------------
*The BASE SAS plus a bunch of functionalities I am missing in BASE SAS*
----------------------------------------------------------------
### Version information:
*The BASE SAS plus a bunch of functionalities I am missing in BASE SAS*
- Package: BasePlus
- Version: 1.37.0
- Generated: 2024-03-09T13:28:58
- Version: 1.42.1
- Generated: 2024-07-19T10:19:18
- 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*2129F372D72A34A4FB1F368A581EA33D64AD4D8F3707213D5B9553F3C3122003` for this version
- Content SHA256: `C*565555B57455548ABAFB1E30A77C9BEE008F601697300B01518FD05A97A1F9F9` for this version
---
# The `BasePlus` package, version: `1.37.0`;
# The `BasePlus` package, version: `1.42.1`;
---
# The BasePlus package [ver. 1.37.0] <a name="baseplus-package"></a> ###############################################
# The BasePlus package [ver. 1.42.1] <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.;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -382,12 +384,13 @@ 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 `20240711`*
--------------------------------------------------------------------
# The `BasePlus` package content
The `BasePlus` package consists of the following content:
1. [`%bppipe()` macro ](#bppipe-macro-1 )
2. [`%deduplistc()` macro ](#deduplistc-macro-2 )
3. [`%deduplistp()` macro ](#deduplistp-macro-3 )
@@ -451,22 +454,23 @@ The `BasePlus` package consists of the following content:
61. [`%filepath()` macro ](#filepath-macro-61 )
62. [`%finddswithvarval()` macro ](#finddswithvarval-macro-62 )
63. [`%fmt()` macro ](#fmt-macro-63 )
64. [`%gettitle()` macro ](#gettitle-macro-64 )
65. [`%iffunc()` macro ](#iffunc-macro-65 )
66. [`%infmt()` macro ](#infmt-macro-66 )
67. [`%letters()` macro ](#letters-macro-67 )
68. [`%libpath()` macro ](#libpath-macro-68 )
69. [`%minclude()` macro ](#minclude-macro-69 )
70. [`%monthshift()` macro ](#monthshift-macro-70 )
71. [`%replist()` macro ](#replist-macro-71 )
72. [`%time()` macro ](#time-macro-72 )
73. [`%today()` macro ](#today-macro-73 )
74. [`%translate()` macro ](#translate-macro-74 )
75. [`%tranwrd()` macro ](#tranwrd-macro-75 )
76. [`%workpath()` macro ](#workpath-macro-76 )
64. [`%generateoneliners()` macro ](#generateoneliners-macro-64 )
65. [`%gettitle()` macro ](#gettitle-macro-65 )
66. [`%iffunc()` macro ](#iffunc-macro-66 )
67. [`%infmt()` macro ](#infmt-macro-67 )
68. [`%letters()` macro ](#letters-macro-68 )
69. [`%libpath()` macro ](#libpath-macro-69 )
70. [`%minclude()` macro ](#minclude-macro-70 )
71. [`%monthshift()` macro ](#monthshift-macro-71 )
72. [`%replist()` macro ](#replist-macro-72 )
73. [`%time()` macro ](#time-macro-73 )
74. [`%today()` macro ](#today-macro-74 )
75. [`%translate()` macro ](#translate-macro-75 )
76. [`%tranwrd()` macro ](#tranwrd-macro-76 )
77. [`%workpath()` macro ](#workpath-macro-77 )
95. [License note](#license)
78. [License note](#license)
---
@@ -516,8 +520,8 @@ 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,
can be no longer than a value carried by a single macrovariable.
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 +538,7 @@ 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: ####################################################
@@ -577,8 +581,8 @@ 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,
can be no longer than a value carried by a single macrovariable.
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 +599,7 @@ 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: ####################################################
@@ -638,8 +642,8 @@ 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,
can be no longer than a value carried by a single macrovariable.
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 +654,13 @@ 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: ####################################################
@@ -692,9 +696,9 @@ 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 macrovariable.
can be no longer than a value carried by a single macro variable.
**Caution.** The value of `X` *has to be* in **the first** byte of the list,
just after the opening bracket, i.e. `(X...)`.
@@ -714,7 +718,7 @@ XlistXofXxXseparatedXvalues
**Arguments description**:
1. `list` - A list of *X separated* values.
1. `list` - A list of *X-separated* values.
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
@@ -773,7 +777,7 @@ 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 +839,8 @@ 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 +1098,12 @@ 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 +1168,12 @@ 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.;
@@ -1484,8 +1489,8 @@ run;
This approach reduces some limitations the LDSN has.
The **additional** feature of the `%LDSNM()` is that when the macro is called
a global macrovariable, which name is the same as hashed dataset name, is created.
The macrovariable value is the text of the argument of the macro. For example
a global macro variable, which name is the same as hashed dataset name, is created.
The macro variable value is the text of the argument of the macro. For example
the following macro call:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
@@ -1495,9 +1500,9 @@ data %LDSNM(John "x" 'y' dog);
run;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
creates `DSN_BF1F8C4D6495B34A_` macrovariable with value: `JOHN "X" 'Y' DOG`.
creates `DSN_BF1F8C4D6495B34A_` macro variable with value: `JOHN "X" 'Y' DOG`.
The macrovariable is useful when combined with `symget()` function and
The macro variable is useful when combined with `symget()` function and
the `indsname=` option to get the original text string value back,
like in this example:
@@ -1535,7 +1540,7 @@ The `%LDSN()` macro executes like a pure macro code.
`data %LDSN(); run;` or `data %LDSN( ); run;` are resolved
to empty string, so the result is equivalent to `data; run;`
- created macrovariable is _global_ in scope.
- created macro variable is _global_ in scope.
### SYNTAX: ###################################################################
@@ -1546,8 +1551,8 @@ 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.
---
@@ -1778,9 +1783,9 @@ 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 macrovariable.
can be no longer than a value carried by a single macro variable.
**Caution.** The value of `X` *has to be* in **the first** byte of the list,
just after the opening bracket, i.e. `(X...)`.
@@ -1800,7 +1805,7 @@ XlistXofXxXseparatedXvalues
**Arguments description**:
1. `list` - A list of *X separated* values.
1. `list` - A list of *X-separated* values.
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
@@ -1910,9 +1915,9 @@ 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 +1949,9 @@ 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 +1968,18 @@ 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 +2000,8 @@ 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 +2020,11 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
<,roundFactor=>
<,rainDropSize=>
<,boxPlotSymbolSize=>
<,boxPlotLineSize=>
<,boxPlotFill=>
<,meanShiftLine=>
<,meanShiftStep=>
<,meanShiftColors=>
<,colorsList=>
<,monochrome=>
<,antialiasMax=>
@@ -2022,6 +2032,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
<,footnote=>
<,catLabels=>
<,xLabels=>
<,xBothAxis=>
<,catLabelPos=>
<,xLabelPos=>
<,catLabelAttrs=>
@@ -2035,17 +2046,26 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
<,catAxisValueAttrs=>
<,xaxisValueAttrs=>
<,xaxisTickstyle=>
<,xaxisValues=>
<,xaxisValuesDisplay=>
<,xaxisValuesFormat=>
<,xaxisValuesRotate=>
<,xaxisOther=>
<,sganno=>
<,odsGraphicsOptions=>
<,sgPlotOptions=>
<,vertical=>
<,VSCALE=>
<,KERNEL_K=>
<,KERNEL_C=>
<,VSCALEmax=>
<,minRange=>
<,maxRange=>
<,cleanTempData=>
<,codePreview=>
<,reuseN=>
)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -2086,6 +2106,28 @@ 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).
* `meanShiftLine` - *Optional*, default value `0`.
Indicates if a line connecting mean symbol
on the Box Plot should be added.
* `meanShiftStep` - *Optional*, default value `0.1`.
Sets how smooth gradient should be
on the "mean-shift" line.
* `meanShiftColors` - *Optional*, default value is empty.
List of colours for plotting the "mean-shift" line.
Empty indicates that the `colorsList` value will be used.
* `colorsList` - *Optional*, default value is empty.
List of colours for plotting.
@@ -2116,6 +2158,10 @@ 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 bottom) 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 +2185,7 @@ 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`.
@@ -2162,11 +2208,34 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
Allowed values are `OUTSIDE`, `INSIDE`, `ACROSS`, and `INBETWEEN`.
*For SAS previous to* **9.4M5** *set to missing!*
* `xaxisValues` - *Optional*, default value is empty.
It is a wrapper to provide value for
the `XAXIS` statement, for `Values` option.
* `xaxisValuesDisplay` - *Optional*, default value is empty.
It is a wrapper to provide value for
the `XAXIS` statement, for `ValuesDisplay` option.
* `xaxisValuesFormat` - *Optional*, default value is empty.
It is a wrapper to provide value for
the `XAXIS` statement, for `ValuesFormat` option.
Instead using `w.d` format, use its alias `Fw.d`.
* `xaxisValuesRotate` - *Optional*, default value is empty.
It is a wrapper to provide value for
the `XAXIS` statement, for `ValuesRotate` option.
* `xaxisOther` - *Optional*, default value is empty.
It is a wrapper to provide value for
the `XAXIS` statement options not mentioned above.
You can use it to provide, e.g., `GRID`, 'MINOR',
`MINORGRID`, `GRIDATTRS=`, or `MINORGRIDATTRS=`.
* `sganno` - *Optional*, default value is empty.
keeps name of a data set for the `sganno=` option
of the SGPLOT procedure.
* `sgPlotOptions` - *Optional*, default value is `noautolegend noborder`.
* `sgPlotOptions` - *Optional*, default value is `noautolegend noborder subpixel`.
List of additional options values for SGPLOT procedure.
* `odsGraphicsOptions` - *Optional*, default value is empty.
@@ -2174,6 +2243,12 @@ 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 +2275,14 @@ 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`.
@@ -2208,6 +2291,11 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
* `codePreview` - *Optional*, default value `0`.
Indicates if source code should be MPRINTed to log.
* `reuseN` - *Optional*, default value `6`.
Indicates how many times colours list should be repeated
so that colours could be reused in case the number of groups
is greater than the colours list length.
---
### NOTES: ###################################################################
@@ -2222,10 +2310,10 @@ 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 +2324,10 @@ 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 +2481,35 @@ 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)
---
@@ -2646,12 +2767,12 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
## >>> `%symdelGlobal()` macro: <<< <a name="symdelglobal-macro"></a> #######################
The `%symdelGlobal()` macro deletes all global macrovariables
The `%symdelGlobal()` macro deletes all global macro variables
created by the user. The only exceptions are read only variables
and variables the one which starts with SYS, AF, or FSP.
In that case a warning is printed in the log.
One temporary global macrovariable `________________98_76_54_32_10_`
One temporary global macro variable `________________98_76_54_32_10_`
and a dataset, in `work` library, named `_%sysfunc(datetime(),hex7.)`
are created and deleted during the process.
@@ -2676,7 +2797,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
**EXAMPLE 1.** Basic use-case one.
Delete global macrovariables, info notes
Delete global macro variables, info notes
and warnings are printed in the log.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
@@ -2696,7 +2817,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 2.** Basic use-case two.
Delete global macrovariables in quite mode
Delete global macro variables in quite mode
No info notes and warnings are printed in the log.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
@@ -2722,7 +2843,7 @@ 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 +3076,7 @@ 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 +3213,9 @@ 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 +3247,9 @@ 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 +3266,18 @@ 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
@@ -3205,7 +3326,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 5.** Use with macrovariables:
**EXAMPLE 5.** Use with macro variables:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%let abc = 10 100 1000;
%put *
@@ -5388,11 +5509,13 @@ 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 +5533,7 @@ 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 +5552,10 @@ 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 +5579,8 @@ 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 +5595,11 @@ 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 +5611,7 @@ https://www.lexjansen.com/wuss/2023/WUSS-2023-Paper-109.pdf
run;
%downloadFilesTo(R:\directoryC, DS=listOfFiles, DSvar=files)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
@@ -5727,7 +5855,125 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
---
## `%gettitle()` macro <a name="gettitle-macro-64"></a> ######
## `%generateoneliners()` macro <a name="generateoneliners-macro-64"></a> ######
## >>> `%GenerateOneLiners()` macro: <<< <a name="generateoneliners-macro"></a> #######################
The `%GenerateOneLiners()` macro is a "macro-generator" dedicated
to "lazy typers".
It allows to generate macro wrappers for functions
that have the following form:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%macro FUNCTION()/parmbuff;
%sysfunc(FUNCTION&syspbuff)
%mend FUNCTION;
%macro qFUNCTION()/parmbuff;
%qsysfunc(FUNCTION&syspbuff)
%mend qFUNCTION;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
See examples below for the details.
The `%GenerateOneLiners()` macro is not pure macro code.
### SYNTAX: ###################################################################
The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%GenerateOneLiners(
<,listOfFunctions=>
<,prefix=>
)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**Arguments description**:
1. `listOfFunctions` - *Required*, is a space separated list of
valid SAS functions. Default value is:
`CATX CATQ CATT CAT COMPRESS REVERSE REPEAT`.
2. `prefix` - *Optional*, a prefix added to the name
of a created macro.
---
### EXAMPLES AND USECASES: ####################################################
**EXAMPLE 1.** Create list of macrofunctions for
`CATX CATQ CATT CAT COMPRESS REVERSE REPEAT`:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%GenerateOneLiners(prefix=_)
%let a = 1,2,3,4,5,6;
%put %_CATX(%str( ),&a.);
%put %_CATQ(2A,&a.);
%put %_QCATQ(1AMD,%str(,),&a.);
%let x=a 1 b 2 c 3 d 4 e 5 f 6 g;
%put %_COMPRESS(&x.);
%put %_COMPRESS(&x.,,ka);
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 2.** Create list of macrofunctions for
`SUM MEAN MEDIAN VAR STD USS CSS RANGE IQR MAD SUMABS`:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%GenerateOneLiners(
listOfFunctions=SUM MEAN MEDIAN VAR STD USS CSS RANGE IQR MAD SUMABS
, prefix=_)
%put
%_SUM(1,2,3,4,5,6)
%_MEAN(1,2,3,4,5,6)
%_MEDIAN(1,2,3,4,5,6)
%_VAR(1,2,3,4,5,6)
;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
**EXAMPLE 3.** Some other lists:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sas
%GenerateOneLiners(prefix=_
, listOfFunctions=CDF PDF RAND QUANTILE SQUANTILE SDF logCDF logPDF logSDF RMS
)
%GenerateOneLiners(prefix=_
, listOfFunctions=YEAR QTR MONTH WEEK DAY HOUR MINUTE SECOND
)
%GenerateOneLiners(prefix=_
, listOfFunctions=PCTL1 PCTL2 PCTL3 PCTL4 PCTL5 PCTL
)
%GenerateOneLiners(prefix=_
, listOfFunctions=YYQ MDY HMS INTCK INTNX SLEEP
)
%GenerateOneLiners(prefix=_
, listOfFunctions=WHICHC WHICHN
)
%GenerateOneLiners(prefix=_
, listOfFunctions=SYMEXIST SYMGLOBL SYMLOCAL
)
%GenerateOneLiners(prefix=_
, listOfFunctions=PRXCHANGE PRXMATCH PRXPAREN PRXPARSE
)
%GenerateOneLiners(prefix=_
, listOfFunctions=MD5 SHA256 HASHING
)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
---
---
## `%gettitle()` macro <a name="gettitle-macro-65"></a> ######
## >>> `%getTitle()` macro: <<< <a name="gettitle-macro"></a> #######################
@@ -5759,7 +6005,7 @@ 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`.
@@ -5813,7 +6059,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
---
## `%iffunc()` macro <a name="iffunc-macro-65"></a> ######
## `%iffunc()` macro <a name="iffunc-macro-66"></a> ######
## >>> `%iffunc()` macro: <<< <a name="iffunc-macro"></a> #######################
@@ -5918,7 +6164,7 @@ 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".);
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
@@ -6014,7 +6260,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
---
## `%infmt()` macro <a name="infmt-macro-66"></a> ######
## `%infmt()` macro <a name="infmt-macro-67"></a> ######
## >>> `%infmt()` macro: <<< <a name="infmt-macro"></a> #######################
@@ -6071,7 +6317,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
---
## `%letters()` macro <a name="letters-macro-67"></a> ######
## `%letters()` macro <a name="letters-macro-68"></a> ######
## >>> `%letters()` macro: <<< <a name="letters-macro"></a> #######################
@@ -6126,7 +6372,7 @@ 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);
@@ -6189,7 +6435,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
---
## `%libpath()` macro <a name="libpath-macro-68"></a> ######
## `%libpath()` macro <a name="libpath-macro-69"></a> ######
## >>> `%libPath()` macro: <<< <a name="libpath-macro"></a> #######################
@@ -6234,7 +6480,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
---
## `%minclude()` macro <a name="minclude-macro-69"></a> ######
## `%minclude()` macro <a name="minclude-macro-70"></a> ######
## >>> `%mInclude()` macro: <<< <a name="minclude-macro"></a> #######################
@@ -6249,7 +6495,7 @@ Link: `https://blogs.sas.com/content/sgf/2023/05/30/embedding-any-code-anywhere-
The implementation presented, in contrary to inspiration source, is
based on the `doSubL()` function and a list of global
macrovariables of the form `______<N>` (six underscores and a number).
macro variables of the form `______<N>` (six underscores and a number).
See examples below for the details.
@@ -6279,7 +6525,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
Sets the `lrecl` value for the file width.
*. `symdel=1` - *Optional*, default value is `1`.
Indicates if the global macrovariables
Indicates if the global macro variables
`______1` to `______N` should be deleted
when the macro ends.
@@ -6447,7 +6693,7 @@ quit;
---
## `%monthshift()` macro <a name="monthshift-macro-70"></a> ######
## `%monthshift()` macro <a name="monthshift-macro-71"></a> ######
## >>> `%monthShift()` macro: <<< <a name="monthshift-macro"></a> #######################
@@ -6596,7 +6842,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
---
## `%replist()` macro <a name="replist-macro-71"></a> ######
## `%replist()` macro <a name="replist-macro-72"></a> ######
## >>> `%repList()` macro: <<< <a name="replist-macro"></a> #######################
@@ -6624,9 +6870,9 @@ 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: `<{[( ,;)]}>`.
@@ -6712,7 +6958,7 @@ run;
---
## `%time()` macro <a name="time-macro-72"></a> ######
## `%time()` macro <a name="time-macro-73"></a> ######
## >>> `%time()` macro: <<< <a name="time-macro"></a> #######################
@@ -6755,7 +7001,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
---
## `%today()` macro <a name="today-macro-73"></a> ######
## `%today()` macro <a name="today-macro-74"></a> ######
## >>> `%today()` macro: <<< <a name="today-macro"></a> #######################
@@ -6798,7 +7044,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
---
## `%translate()` macro <a name="translate-macro-74"></a> ######
## `%translate()` macro <a name="translate-macro-75"></a> ######
## >>> `%translate()` macro: <<< <a name="translate-macro"></a> #######################
@@ -6862,7 +7108,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
---
## `%tranwrd()` macro <a name="tranwrd-macro-75"></a> ######
## `%tranwrd()` macro <a name="tranwrd-macro-76"></a> ######
## >>> `%tranwrd()` macro: <<< <a name="tranwrd-macro"></a> #######################
@@ -6929,7 +7175,7 @@ The basic syntax is the following, the `<...>` means optional parameters:
---
## `%workpath()` macro <a name="workpath-macro-76"></a> ######
## `%workpath()` macro <a name="workpath-macro-77"></a> ######
## >>> `%workPath()` macro: <<< <a name="workpath-macro"></a> #######################

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