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The Variable Name (limited to 8-characters for compatibility with the SAS System V5 Transport format) A descriptive Variable Label, using up to 40 characters, which should be unique for each variable in the dataset; The data Type (e.g., whether the variable value is a character or numeric)
The SAS language is a fourth-generation computer programming language used for statistical analysis, created by Anthony James Barr at North Carolina State University. [1] [2] Its primary applications include data mining and machine learning.
The choice of a variable name should be mnemonic — that is, designed to indicate to the casual observer the intent of its use. One-character variable names should be avoided except for temporary "throwaway" variables. Common names for temporary variables are i, j, k, m, and n for integers; c, d, and e for characters. int i;
A numeric character reference refers to a character by its Universal Character Set/Unicode code point, and a character entity reference refers to a character by a predefined name. A numeric character reference uses the format &#nnnn; or &#xhhhh; where nnnn is the code point in decimal form, and hhhh is the code point in hexadecimal form.
SAS macros are pieces of code or variables that are coded once and referenced to perform repetitive tasks. [8] SAS data can be published in HTML, PDF, Excel, RTF and other formats using the Output Delivery System, which was first introduced in 2007. [9] SAS Enterprise Guide is SAS's point-and-click interface.
Backtick as last character of line. PowerShell; Hyphen as last character of line. SQL*Plus; Underscore as last character of line. AutoIt; Cobra; Visual Basic; Xojo; Ellipsis (as three periods–not one special character) MATLAB: The ellipsis token need not be the last characters on the line, but any following it will be ignored. [7]
UTF-32 (32-bit Unicode Transformation Format), sometimes called UCS-4, is a fixed-length encoding used to encode Unicode code points that uses exactly 32 bits (four bytes) per code point (but a number of leading bits must be zero as there are far fewer than 2 32 Unicode code points, needing actually only 21 bits). [1]
This is the same format used by the companion NAA 6 format, the only difference being a 16-byte number space is assumed, rather than an 8-byte number space. This leaves a total of 25 contiguous nibbles for vendor-defined values. "Mapped EUI-64" formats manage to fit an EUI-64 address into an 8-byte WWN.