
Generates a SAS program to convert the ssd contents to SAS transport format
and then uses read.xport
to obtain a data frame.
read.ssd(libname, sectionnames,
tmpXport=tempfile(), tmpProgLoc=tempfile(), sascmd="sas")
character string defining the SAS library (usually a directory reference)
character vector giving member names. These are
files in the libname
directory. They will usually have a
.ssd0x
or .sas7bdat
extension, which should be
omitted. Use of ASCII names of at most 8 characters is strongly
recommended.
character string: location where temporary xport format archive should reside -- defaults to a randomly named file in the session temporary directory, which will be removed.
character string: location where temporary conversion SAS program should reside -- defaults to a randomly named file in session temporary directory, which will be removed on successful operation.
character string giving full path to SAS executable.
A data frame if all goes well, or NULL
with warnings and some
enduring side effects (log file for auditing)
Creates a SAS program and runs it.
Error handling is primitive.
# NOT RUN {
## if there were some files on the web we could get a real
## runnable example
# }
# NOT RUN {
R> list.files("trialdata")
[1] "baseline.sas7bdat" "form11.sas7bdat" "form12.sas7bdat"
[4] "form13.sas7bdat" "form22.sas7bdat" "form23.sas7bdat"
[7] "form3.sas7bdat" "form4.sas7bdat" "form48.sas7bdat"
[10] "form50.sas7bdat" "form51.sas7bdat" "form71.sas7bdat"
[13] "form72.sas7bdat" "form8.sas7bdat" "form9.sas7bdat"
[16] "form90.sas7bdat" "form91.sas7bdat"
R> baseline <- read.ssd("trialdata", "baseline")
R> form90 <- read.ssd("trialdata", "form90")
## Or for a Windows example
sashome <- "/Program Files/SAS/SAS 9.1"
read.ssd(file.path(sashome, "core", "sashelp"), "retail",
sascmd = file.path(sashome, "sas.exe"))
# }
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