Next: WRITE, Previous: REREAD, Up: Data Input and Output [Contents][Index]
REPEATING DATA /STARTS=start-end /OCCURS=n_occurs /FILE=’file_name’ /LENGTH=length /CONTINUED[=cont_start-cont_end] /ID=id_start-id_end=id_var /{TABLE,NOTABLE} /DATA=var_spec… where each var_spec takes one of the forms var_list start-end [type_spec] var_list (fortran_spec)
REPEATING DATA
parses groups of data repeating in
a uniform format, possibly with several groups on a single line. Each
group of data corresponds with one case. REPEATING DATA
may only be
used within an INPUT PROGRAM
structure (see INPUT PROGRAM).
When used with DATA LIST
, it
can be used to parse groups of cases that share a subset of variables
but differ in their other data.
The STARTS
subcommand is required. Specify a range of columns, using
literal numbers or numeric variable names. This range specifies the
columns on the first line that are used to contain groups of data. The
ending column is optional. If it is not specified, then the record
width of the input file is used. For the inline file (see BEGIN DATA) this is 80 columns; for a file with fixed record widths it is the
record width; for other files it is 1024 characters by default.
The OCCURS
subcommand is required. It must be a number or the name of a
numeric variable. Its value is the number of groups present in the
current record.
The DATA
subcommand is required. It must be the last subcommand
specified. It is used to specify the data present within each repeating
group. Column numbers are specified relative to the beginning of a
group at column 1. Data is specified in the same way as with DATA LIST
FIXED
(see DATA LIST FIXED).
All other subcommands are optional.
FILE specifies the file to read, either a file name as a string or a
file handle (see File Handles). If FILE is not present then the
default is the last file handle used on DATA LIST
(lexically, not in
terms of flow of control).
By default REPEATING DATA
will output a table describing how it will
parse the input data. Specifying NOTABLE
will disable this behavior;
specifying TABLE will explicitly enable it.
The LENGTH
subcommand specifies the length in characters of each group.
If it is not present then length is inferred from the DATA
subcommand.
LENGTH can be a number or a variable name.
Normally all the data groups are expected to be present on a single
line. Use the CONTINUED
command to indicate that data can be continued
onto additional lines. If data on continuation lines starts at the left
margin and continues through the entire field width, no column
specifications are necessary on CONTINUED
. Otherwise, specify the
possible range of columns in the same way as on STARTS.
When data groups are continued from line to line, it is easy
for cases to get out of sync through careless hand editing. The
ID
subcommand allows a case identifier to be present on each line of
repeating data groups. REPEATING DATA
will check for the same
identifier on each line and report mismatches. Specify the range of
columns that the identifier will occupy, followed by an equals sign
(‘=’) and the identifier variable name. The variable must already
have been declared with NUMERIC
or another command.
REPEATING DATA
should be the last command given within an
INPUT PROGRAM
. It should not be enclosed within a LOOP
structure (see LOOP). Use DATA LIST
before, not after,
REPEATING DATA
.
Next: WRITE, Previous: REREAD, Up: Data Input and Output [Contents][Index]