X-Git-Url: https://pintos-os.org/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi?a=blobdiff_plain;f=doc%2Flanguage.texi;h=7b750eb7ae75ac3acf8053184aaacded62fc97a2;hb=4f9ffb2d8002963c99b6b63edc82cf55608a887b;hp=8b8b7fa1189fff98f1689d1c770e47b60d86d2a2;hpb=540e5b39fe6617203c86f4b582f35537e0fe90ef;p=pspp diff --git a/doc/language.texi b/doc/language.texi index 8b8b7fa118..7b750eb7ae 100644 --- a/doc/language.texi +++ b/doc/language.texi @@ -507,6 +507,75 @@ they are displayed. Example: a width of 8, with 2 decimal places. Similar to print format, but used by the @cmd{WRITE} command (@pxref{WRITE}). +@cindex measurement level +@item Measurement level +@anchor{Measurement Level} +One of the following: + +@table @asis +@item Nominal +Each value of a nominal variable represents a distinct category. The +possible categories are finite and often have value labels. The order +of categories is not significant. Political parties, US states, and +yes/no choices are nominal. Numeric and string variables can be +nominal. + +@item Ordinal +Ordinal variables also represent distinct categories, but their values +are arranged according to some natural order. Likert scales, e.g.@: +from strongly disagree to strongly agree, are ordinal. Data grouped +into ranges, e.g.@: age groups or income groups, are ordinal. Both +numeric and string variables can be ordinal. String values are +ordered alphabetically, so letter grades from A to F will work as +expected, but @code{poor}, @code{satisfactory}, @code{excellent} will +not. + +@item Scale +Scale variables are ones for which differences and ratios are +meaningful. These are often values which have a natural unit +attached, such as age in years, income in dollars, or distance in +miles. Only numeric variables are scalar. +@end table + +Variables created by @cmd{COMPUTE} and similar transformations, +obtained from external sources, etc., initially have an unknown +measurement level. Any procedure that reads the data will then assign +a default measurement level. @pspp{} can assign some defaults without +reading the data: + +@itemize @bullet +@item +Nominal, if it's a string variable. + +@item +Nominal, if the variable has a WKDAY or MONTH print format. + +@item +Scale, if the variable has a DOLLAR, CCA through CCE, or time or date +print format. +@end itemize + +Otherwise, @pspp{} reads the data and decides based on its +distribution: + +@itemize @bullet +@item +Nominal, if all observations are missing. + +@item +Scale, if one or more valid observations are noninteger or negative. + +@item +Scale, if no valid observation is less than 10. + +@item +Scale, if the variable has 24 or more unique valid values. The value +24 is the default and can be adjusted (@pxref{SET SCALEMIN}). +@end itemize + +Finally, if none of the above is true, @pspp{} assigns the variable a +nominal measurement level. + @cindex custom attributes @item Custom attributes User-defined associations between names and values. @xref{VARIABLE