- Fre Stata Install How To Start
- Fre Stata Install How To Change
- Install Stata 16
- Fre Stata Install How To Change
- How To Download Stata
Stata for Data Description version 16 Page 5 of 34 Design Data Collection Data Management Data Summarization Statistical Analysis Reporting Step 2. Click on (click here to install). When the installation is complete click on (click here to return to previous screen).
Fre Stata Install How To Start
- To install Stata from the command line without GUI, launch the Windows Command Prompt as Administrator. You may launch the Windows Command Prompt as Administrator by pressing Windows+R to open the “Run” box. Type cmd into the box and then press Ctrl+Shift+Enter to run the command as an.
- Sep 17, 2016 So an alternative, if you are lucky enough to have access to STATA, is to simply open your dataset and type “expand Frequency” into the command area to automatically expand the data in your frequency column into instances of case data. To check whether your data’s been expanded properly, simply ensure that the number of rows in your new.
- For short term 'evaluation' or for long term use? If short term, then you can contact Stata corp (visit their website) for an 30 days evaluation version of Stata 14. But if you are looking for Stata12 specifically for long term use for free then.
- For short term 'evaluation' or for long term use? If short term, then you can contact Stata corp (visit their website) for an 30 days evaluation version of Stata 14.
Fre Stata Install How To Change
- Dec 2018
- 54
Foreach loop with tabs
Hello Statalist! This is my second post here; my first one ended up with quite helpful responses, so thank you.
This current question may actually be as much a stylistic one as anything else. I have a large number of survey questions (about 50) that, as a first step, I need to do solely -tab- or -fre- for. So I suppose one option would be:
And so on.
Is it possible (and desirable) to do this in a more efficient way, perhaps with a foreach loop (which I am currently in the process of familiarizing myself with)?
Thank you kindly!- Mar 2014
- 3108
seeComment
- Aug 2014
- 1409
And for exporting all tables generated by the tab1 command, you can use asdoc. asdoc can be downloaded from SSC. See this example
For those who are not yet familiar with asdoc, asdoc can be downloaded from SSC and can be used with almost all Stata commands. Here is a short blog post that shows how asdoc can be used with any Stata command http://fintechprofessor.com/2018/02/...basic-example/. You can also watch several YouTube videos that show the use of asdoc https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zdI6...LwodAk2oqLYhr-Regards
--------------------------------------------------
Attaullah Shah, PhD.
Associate Professor of Finance, Institute of Management Sciences Peshawar, Pakistan
www.FinTechProfessor.com
If you use MS Word, do check my asdoc program that easily sends Stata output to MS WordComment
- Dec 2018
- 54
Attaullah, is there a way to get variable labels using asdoc and -fre-? When I use the regular code (asdoc fre varname, includelabeled) it shows the fre table in the Stata window but an error message instead of a MyFile.
Secondly, is there a way to get asdoc to round to one decimal? It gives me three decimals as the default and I'd prefer it to round to just one.Comment
- Aug 2014
- 1409
I think -fre- is not a Stata built-in command, I tried searching it in the help files but could not find it. And for controlling the number of decimal points, you can use the dec() option. For example,
However, the dec() option does not work with the tab command. A major update to asdoc is on its way where researchers would easily control decimal points and other formattings for each column of a table.Regards
--------------------------------------------------
Attaullah Shah, PhD.
Associate Professor of Finance, Institute of Management Sciences Peshawar, Pakistan
www.FinTechProfessor.com
If you use MS Word, do check my asdoc program that easily sends Stata output to MS WordComment
- Mar 2014
- 25184
fre is from SSC.
. ssc desc fre
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
package fre from http://fmwww.bc.edu/repec/bocode/f
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE
'FRE': module to display one-way frequency table
DESCRIPTION/AUTHOR(S)
fre displays, for each specified variable, a univariate
frequency table containing counts, percent, and cumulative
percent. Variables may be string or numeric. Labels, in full
length, and values are printed. By default, fre only tabulates
the smallest and largest 10 values (along with all missing
values), but this can be changed. Furthermore, values with zero
observed frequency may be included in the tables. The default
for fre is to display the frequency tables in the results
window. Alternatively, the tables may be written to a file on
disk, either tab-delimited or LaTeX-formatted.
KW: data management
KW: frequencies
KW: frequency table
KW: tabulation
Requires: Stata version 9.2
Distribution-Date: 20150603
Author: Ben Jann, University of Bern
Support: email [email protected]
INSTALLATION FILES (type net install fre)
fre.ado
fre.hlp
ANCILLARY FILES (type net get fre)
fre.zip
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(type ssc install fre to install)
Anne Todd Posters are asked please to explain where community-contributed commands they refer to come from. Please see FAQ Advice #12.Comment
- Dec 2018
- 54
Sorry Nick Cox , I forgot to mention that.
Attaullah Shah it is great to hear that updates are coming. Asdoc seems like it will be an amazing game-changer especially if formatting could be more easily controlled! Thank u!Comment
I’ve been learning a bit of R this summer. R is a pretty powerful language and environment used for statistical computing. I chose it because it’s open-source (and therefore free!). I’ve been using RStudio in conjunction with R — RStudio has a more intuitive GUI that’s a little easier for me to use as a beginner.
As I mentioned in earlier posts, part of my project involves regression analysis. This type of analysis is usually done on case data. However, my datasets yielded frequency tables, and I found myself needing a way to expand these tables into case form.
Install Stata 16
The answer is a function called
expand.dft
that is part of the vcdExtra package for R. Downloading vcdExtra is simple, but keep in mind that you may need to install a few dependencies to get it to work correctly.Likewise, using vcdExtra is pretty simple. Make sure you know which column in your raw data contains the frequency numbers, and name that column
Frequency
for simplicity’s sake.I started with a frequency table that looked a little like this:Gender | Enrollment | Frequency |
---|---|---|
Male | 0 | 50 |
Male | 1 | 25 |
Female | 0 | 50 |
Female | 1 | 15 |
Here’s the code:
Easy peasy! The end result is a table of 140 rows (50+25+50+15), one for each person represented in the original frequency data.
Fre Stata Install How To Change
Another note: I’m working with a large dataset that contains millions of points. Expanding that data to case form, then running a regression on it can be quite a task for a computer that doesn’t have a ton of RAM. So an alternative, if you are lucky enough to have access to STATA, is to simply open your dataset and type “expand Frequency” into the command area to automatically expand the data in your frequency column into instances of case data.
How To Download Stata
To check whether your data’s been expanded properly, simply ensure that the number of rows in your new dataset are equal to the sum of the cells in your frequency column.