Dear all,
I ran a freq on one of the variables in my data file and got the following table:
Task2
Can somebody explain to me why I get separate freq for the same categories? (6 & 7)
Best;
Mehdi
-- Mehdi Riazi, PhD Associate Professor & Director HDR Department of Linguistics Faculty of Human Sciences Macquarie University NSW 2109 Room: C5A 575 Phone: +61(02) 98507951 Fax: +61(02) 98509199 www.ling.mq.edu.au |
I suspect your cat var is defined as text rather than numeric and then while typing in labels inadvertently a blank is added to 6 & 7 and so SPSS sees them as different categories. Go to variables section and click and make this var as numeric and SPSS resets all 6b/b6 to 6 and 7b or b7 to 7 and then run freq. Max. Dear all, I ran a freq on one of the variables in my data file and got the following table:
Can somebody explain to me why I get separate freq for the same categories? (6 & 7) Best; Mehdi Department of Linguistics |
In reply to this post by Mehdi Riazi
Those values are not actually the same.
You are seeing the formatted representation, but if the two "6"s
and two "7"s differ at all, they are considered different values
for frequencies. Try increasing the number of decimals (via the Data
Editor( until you see the difference. If you want to consider them
the same, you might need to round the values in a transformation.
HTH, Jon Peck (no "h") aka Kim Senior Software Engineer, IBM [hidden email] new phone: 720-342-5621 From: Mehdi Riazi <[hidden email]> To: [hidden email] Date: 11/16/2011 06:39 PM Subject: [SPSSX-L] freq table Sent by: "SPSSX(r) Discussion" <[hidden email]> Dear all, I ran a freq on one of the variables in my data file and got the following table:
Can somebody explain to me why I get separate freq for the same categories? (6 & 7) Best; Mehdi -- Mehdi Riazi, PhD Associate Professor & Director HDR Department of Linguistics Faculty of Human Sciences Macquarie University NSW 2109 Room: C5A 575 Phone: +61(02) 98507951 Fax: +61(02) 98509199 www.ling.mq.edu.au |
Thanks to all. Jon's trick worked. :-) M
2011/11/17 Jon K Peck <[hidden email]> Those values are not actually the same. You are seeing the formatted representation, but if the two "6"s and two "7"s differ at all, they are considered different values for frequencies. Try increasing the number of decimals (via the Data Editor( until you see the difference. If you want to consider them the same, you might need to round the values in a transformation. |
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