X-Git-Url: https://pintos-os.org/cgi-bin/gitweb.cgi?a=blobdiff_plain;f=doc%2Ftransformation.texi;h=74d972a2e22599534a82a82b1599639fcb283200;hb=293d0658260be13274d3d74b3596883528e40f28;hp=5ea809e54f7e0ebd67bfeb343cd22000b29e759c;hpb=ff5e81803b409939e921211f1ffd46cb24df33e9;p=pspp diff --git a/doc/transformation.texi b/doc/transformation.texi index 5ea809e54f..74d972a2e2 100644 --- a/doc/transformation.texi +++ b/doc/transformation.texi @@ -1,3 +1,12 @@ +@c PSPP - a program for statistical analysis. +@c Copyright (C) 2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc. +@c Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document +@c under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 +@c or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; +@c with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. +@c A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU +@c Free Documentation License". +@c @node Data Manipulation @chapter Data transformations @cindex transformations @@ -22,7 +31,7 @@ as a rule. @vindex AGGREGATE @display -AGGREGATE +AGGREGATE OUTFILE=@{*,'@var{file_name}',@var{file_handle}@} [MODE=@{REPLACE, ADDVARIABLES@}] /PRESORTED /DOCUMENT @@ -51,7 +60,7 @@ In @subcmd{REPLACE} mode, the entire active dataset is replaced by a new dataset which contains just the break variables and the destination varibles. In this mode, the new file will contain as many cases as there are unique combinations of the break variables. -In @subcmd{ADDVARIABLES} mode, the destination variables will be appended to +In @subcmd{ADDVARIABLES} mode, the destination variables will be appended to the existing active dataset. Cases which have identical combinations of values in their break variables, will receive identical values for the destination variables. @@ -238,19 +247,41 @@ variables, @subcmd{INTO}, and a list of target variables. There must the same number of source and target variables. The target variables must not already exist. -By default, increasing values of a source variable (for a string, this -is based on character code comparisons) are recoded to increasing values -of its target variable. To cause increasing values of a source variable -to be recoded to decreasing values of its target variable (@var{n} down -to 1), specify @subcmd{DESCENDING}. +@cmd{AUTORECODE} ordinarily assigns each increasing non-missing value +of a source variable (for a string, this is based on character code +comparisons) to consecutive values of its target variable. For +example, the smallest non-missing value of the source variable is +recoded to value 1, the next smallest to 2, and so on. If the source +variable has user-missing values, they are recoded to +consecutive values just above the non-missing values. For example, if +a source variables has seven distinct non-missing values, then the +smallest missing value would be recoded to 8, the next smallest to 9, +and so on. + +Use @subcmd{DESCENDING} to reverse the sort order for non-missing +values, so that the largest non-missing value is recoded to 1, the +second-largest to 2, and so on. Even with @subcmd{DESCENDING}, +user-missing values are still recoded in ascending order just above +the non-missing values. + +The system-missing value is always recoded into the system-missing +variable in target variables. + +If a source value has a value label, then that value label is retained +for the new value in the target variable. Otherwise, the source value +itself becomes each new value's label. + +Variable labels are copied from the source to target variables. @subcmd{PRINT} is currently ignored. The @subcmd{GROUP} subcommand is relevant only if more than one variable is to be recoded. It causes a single mapping between source and target values to -be used, instead of one map per variable. +be used, instead of one map per variable. With @subcmd{GROUP}, +user-missing values are taken from the first source variable that has +any user-missing values. -If @subcmd{/BLANK=MISSING} is given, then string variables which contain only +If @subcmd{/BLANK=MISSING} is given, then string variables which contain only whitespace are recoded as SYSMIS. If @subcmd{/BLANK=VALID} is given then they will be allocated a value like any other. @subcmd{/BLANK} is not relevant to numeric values. @subcmd{/BLANK=VALID} is the default. @@ -304,7 +335,8 @@ When @cmd{COMPUTE} is specified following @cmd{TEMPORARY} @vindex COUNT @display -COUNT @var{var_name} = @var{var}@dots{} (@var{value}@dots{}). +COUNT @var{var_name} = @var{var}@dots{} (@var{value}@dots{}) + [/@var{var_name} = @var{var}@dots{} (@var{value}@dots{})]@dots{} Each @var{value} takes one of the following forms: @var{number} @@ -366,7 +398,7 @@ the following commands: @enumerate @item Count the number of times the value 1 occurs through these variables -for each case and assigns the count to variable @code{QCOUNT}. +for each case and assigns the count to variable @code{QCOUNT}. @item Print out the total number of times the value 1 occurs throughout @@ -515,7 +547,7 @@ numeric variables in the same recoding. After the list of source variables, there should be one or more @dfn{mappings}. Each mapping is enclosed in parentheses, and contains the source values and a destination value separated by a single @samp{=}. -The source values are used to specify the values in the dataset which +The source values are used to specify the values in the dataset which need to change, and the destination value specifies the new value to which they should be changed. Each @var{src_value} may take one of the following forms: @@ -531,7 +563,7 @@ This form is valid only when the source variables are numeric. It specifies all values in the range between @var{num1} and @var{num2}, including both endpoints of the range. By convention, @var{num1} should be less than @var{num2}. -Open-ended ranges may be specified using @samp{LO} or @samp{LOWEST} +Open-ended ranges may be specified using @samp{LO} or @samp{LOWEST} for @var{num1} or @samp{HI} or @samp{HIGHEST} for @var{num2}. @item @samp{MISSING} @@ -545,7 +577,7 @@ It is valid for both numeric variables only. @item @samp{ELSE} The @samp{ELSE} keyword may be used to match any values which are not matched by any other @var{src_value} appearing in the command. -If this keyword appears, it should be used in the last mapping of the +If this keyword appears, it should be used in the last mapping of the command. @end table @@ -570,7 +602,7 @@ This is meaningful only if @samp{INTO @var{dest_vars}} is specified. @end table Mappings are considered from left to right. -Therefore, if a value is matched by a @var{src_value} from more than +Therefore, if a value is matched by a @var{src_value} from more than one mapping, the first (leftmost) mapping which matches will be considered. Any subsequent matches will be ignored. @@ -579,20 +611,24 @@ The behaviour of the command is slightly different depending on whether it appears or not. If @samp{INTO @var{dest_vars}} does not appear, then values will be recoded -``in place´´. This means that the recoded values are written back to the +``in place''. +This means that the recoded values are written back to the source variables from whence the original values came. In this case, the @var{dest_value} for every mapping must imply a value which has the same type as the @var{src_value}. For example, if the source value is a string value, it is not permissible for @var{dest_value} to be @samp{SYSMIS} or another forms which implies a numeric result. +It is also not permissible for @var{dest_value} to be longer than the width +of the source variable. + The following example two numeric variables @var{x} and @var{y} are recoded in place. Zero is recoded to 99, the values 1 to 10 inclusive are unchanged, values 1000 and higher are recoded to the system-missing value and all other values are changed to 999: @example -recode @var{x} @var{y} +recode @var{x} @var{y} (0 = 99) (1 THRU 10 = COPY) (1000 THRU HIGHEST = SYSMIS) @@ -604,30 +640,30 @@ into the variables specified in @var{dest_vars}, which must therefore contain a list of valid variable names. The number of variables in @var{dest_vars} must be the same as the number of variables in @var{src_vars} -and the respective order of the variables in @var{dest_vars} corresponds to +and the respective order of the variables in @var{dest_vars} corresponds to the order of @var{src_vars}. -That is to say, recoded values whose +That is to say, recoded values whose original value came from the @var{n}th variable in @var{src_vars} will be placed into the @var{n}th variable in @var{dest_vars}. The source variables will be unchanged. If any mapping implies a string as its destination value, then the respective -destination variable must already exist, or +destination variable must already exist, or have been declared using @cmd{STRING} or another transformation. Numeric variables however will be automatically created if they don't already exist. The following example deals with two source variables, @var{a} and @var{b} which contain string values. Hence there are two destination variables @var{v1} and @var{v2}. -Any cases where @var{a} or @var{b} contain the values @samp{apple}, +Any cases where @var{a} or @var{b} contain the values @samp{apple}, @samp{pear} or @samp{pomegranate} will result in @var{v1} or @var{v2} being -filled with the string @samp{fruit} whilst cases with +filled with the string @samp{fruit} whilst cases with @samp{tomato}, @samp{lettuce} or @samp{carrot} will result in @samp{vegetable}. Any other values will produce the result @samp{unknown}: @example string @var{v1} (a20). string @var{v2} (a20). -recode @var{a} @var{b} +recode @var{a} @var{b} ("apple" "pear" "pomegranate" = "fruit") ("tomato" "lettuce" "carrot" = "vegetable") (ELSE = "unknown") @@ -638,20 +674,20 @@ There is one very special mapping, not mentioned above. If the source variable is a string variable then a mapping may be specified as @samp{(CONVERT)}. This mapping, if it appears must be the last mapping given and -the @samp{INTO @var{dest_vars}} clause must also be given and -must not refer to a string variable. +the @samp{INTO @var{dest_vars}} clause must also be given and +must not refer to a string variable. @samp{CONVERT} causes a number specified as a string to -be converted to a numeric value. +be converted to a numeric value. For example it will convert the string @samp{"3"} into the numeric value 3 (note that it will not convert @samp{three} into 3). If the string cannot be parsed as a number, then the system-missing value is assigned instead. In the following example, cases where the value of @var{x} (a string variable) is the empty string, are recoded to 999 and all others are converted to the -numeric equivalent of the input value. The results are placed into the +numeric equivalent of the input value. The results are placed into the numeric variable @var{y}: @example -recode @var{x} +recode @var{x} ("" = 999) (convert) into @var{y}. @@ -661,14 +697,14 @@ It is possible to specify multiple recodings on a single command. Introduce additional recodings with a slash (@samp{/}) to separate them from the previous recodings: @example -recode - @var{a} (2 = 22) (else = 99) +recode + @var{a} (2 = 22) (else = 99) /@var{b} (1 = 3) into @var{z} . @end example @noindent Here we have two recodings. The first affects the source variable @var{a} and recodes in-place the value 2 into 22 and all other values to 99. -The second recoding copies the values of @var{b} into the the variable @var{z}, +The second recoding copies the values of @var{b} into the variable @var{z}, changing any instances of 1 into 3. @node SORT CASES @@ -700,4 +736,4 @@ cases. If workspace is exhausted, it falls back to a merge sort algorithm that involves creates numerous temporary files. -@cmd{SORT CASES} may not be specified following @cmd{TEMPORARY}. +@cmd{SORT CASES} may not be specified following @cmd{TEMPORARY}.