Dear list! I have an often recurring problem and have sneaking suspicion that there must be a more elegant solution than my clumsy one. As a typical example I have a vertical file with some background variables (i.e. ID, VAR1 to VAR10). As an additional variable I have ADMINORDER, which is the admission number sorted by date. A patient can have between 1 to 5 admissions, so ADMINORDER varies between 1 to 5 within the same ID. I want to restructure this file into a horizontal one, (i.e. ID, VAR1(1) to VAR10(1), VAR1(2) to VAR10(2),…………….VAR1(5) to VAR10(5)) in order to make same some correlations and crosstabulations. I usually do this by creating 5 subfiles and then before merging rename the variables in file 2-5 as no two variables can have the same name in a file. This is a rather tedious process when you have large number of background variables. Is there a more elegant and efficient solution to this ? I’ve been experimenting with RESTRUCTURE FILES but can’t get it to work properly and probably miss something there. Can anybody help or give a hint? best Staffan Lindberg Sweden |
Staffan,
CASESTOVARS
helps in your case.
Good luck,
Mario
Von: Staffan Lindberg <[hidden email]> An: [hidden email] Gesendet: Montag, den 14. Februar 2011, 16:31:40 Uhr Betreff: Restructuring a vertical file into a horisontal one without renaming the variables manually Dear list!
I have an often recurring problem and have sneaking suspicion that there must be a more elegant solution than my clumsy one. As a typical example I have a vertical file with some background variables (i.e. ID, VAR1 to VAR10). As an additional variable I have ADMINORDER, which is the admission number sorted by date. A patient can have between 1 to 5 admissions, so ADMINORDER varies between 1 to 5 within the same ID.
I want to restructure this file into a horizontal one, (i.e. ID, VAR1(1) to VAR10(1), VAR1(2) to VAR10(2),…………….VAR1(5) to VAR10(5)) in order to make same some correlations and crosstabulations. I usually do this by creating 5 subfiles and then before merging rename the variables in file 2-5 as no two variables can have the same name in a file. This is a rather tedious process when you have large number of background variables. Is there a more elegant and efficient solution to this ? I’ve been experimenting with RESTRUCTURE FILES but can’t get it to work properly and probably miss something there. Can anybody help or give a hint?
best
Staffan Lindberg Sweden
Mario Giesel
Munich, Germany |
Administrator
|
For examples of how to use CASESTOVARS, see this tutorial from the UCLA Computing website.
http://www.ats.ucla.edu/stat/Spss/modules/reshapew115.htm For other data management tutorials, see: http://www.ats.ucla.edu/stat/Spss/topics/data_management.htm HTH.
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In reply to this post by Staffan Lindberg
Hi Staffan,
See if this example can help: DATASET CLOSE ALL. NEW FILE. /* FIRST SOME SAMPLE DATA */ DATA LIST LIST /ID VAR1 TO VAR3 ADMINORDER (5F2). BEGIN DATA. 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 1 0 3 1 0 1 1 4 1 1 1 0 5 2 0 0 0 1 3 0 1 0 1 3 0 0 0 2 END DATA. EXECUTE. /* NOW LET'S RESTRUCTURE THE FILE */ SORT CASES BY ID ADMINORDER. CASESTOVARS /ID=ID /INDEX=ADMINORDER /GROUPBY=INDEX. /* AND THIS IS THE FILE RESTRUCTURED */ LIST. Cheers, Luca
Mr. Luca Meyer
www.lucameyer.com |
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