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Adventures & experiences in contemporary technology
By default in the DMS, Base SAS opens datasets from its Explorer using VIEWTABLE and with variable labels in the column headings and not variable names. Because I have been fortunate to use systems with SAS/FSP both installed and licensed, I have taken to using FSVIEW for browsing SAS datasets as a workaround and, though the interface may look old to some, it proves to be a very flexible tool that still has a few things to teach newer ones. With SAS Enterprise Guide, the dataset viewing functionality is different to both VIEWTABLE and FSVIEW but I have been to make it work for me. The SAS EG dataset viewing tool may appear like the former of these but it has a few tricks to teach its forbear.
Now that I find myself working again with the traditional SAS DMS interface and without SAS/FSP, I decided to see if there was a way to get VIEWTABLE to display variable names instead of variable labels by default. As it happened, the answer was found in an internet forum discussion. From the SAS command line, you can achieve the result issuing a command like the following:
VT SASHELP.VCOLUMN COLHEADING=NAMES
VT is the VIEWTABLE shortcut but it is the COLHEADING=NAMES option on the line that gets variable names shown in column headings. Taking it further, you can set this as the default setting for datasets opened using a mouse from Explorer panes using the following procedure:
Because the DMS looks similar across versions 8.0 through to 9.2, the above instructions should be relevant to all of those. While I have yet to get the opportunity to use SAS 9.3, I would be surprised to find that the traditional SAS interface has changed there too, even though much else has changed about SAS. In fact, the latest version of SAS has brought quite a few new interesting features for programmers so it seems that you can do more through a familiar interface, not entirely a bad thing. It looks as if this VIEWTABLE tweak could be useful for a while yet.
this action blew away all my tables in my local worklib. Have to re-run now.
That sounds odd because surely it would take either a PROC DATASETS or a PROC SQL step to do that kind of thing. It never happened on me. Or did you end up closing an interactive SAS session and restart it? That would explain what you saw.
correction didn’t blow them away, but upon open it show 0 obs. I reverted back to old code and now I can see my tables again.
Good to hear that you still have your datasets. Still strange to hear that change meant that no records could be seen in them though. Issuing NAMES in the SAS command line will switch between variable names and labels for you anyway, unless you are using Enterprise Guide and that is another matter.
Wonderful solution! Finally getting rid of variable descriptions which get set when you rename variables during a data step.
Great Guide ! Thanks !!!!