File: transformation.texi

package info (click to toggle)
pspp 0.8.4-1
  • links: PTS
  • area: main
  • in suites: jessie, jessie-kfreebsd
  • size: 35,692 kB
  • ctags: 20,600
  • sloc: ansic: 218,288; sh: 12,890; xml: 11,342; perl: 715; lisp: 597; makefile: 157
file content (707 lines) | stat: -rw-r--r-- 28,533 bytes parent folder | download | duplicates (3)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
@node Data Manipulation
@chapter Data transformations
@cindex transformations

The @pspp{} procedures examined in this chapter manipulate data and
prepare the active dataset for later analyses.  They do not produce output,
as a rule.

@menu
* AGGREGATE::                   Summarize multiple cases into a single case.
* AUTORECODE::                  Automatic recoding of variables.
* COMPUTE::                     Assigning a variable a calculated value.
* COUNT::                       Counting variables with particular values.
* FLIP::                        Exchange variables with cases.
* IF::                          Conditionally assigning a calculated value.
* RECODE::                      Mapping values from one set to another.
* SORT CASES::                  Sort the active dataset.
@end menu

@node AGGREGATE
@section AGGREGATE
@vindex AGGREGATE

@display
AGGREGATE 
        OUTFILE=@{*,'@var{file_name}',@var{file_handle}@} [MODE=@{REPLACE, ADDVARIABLES@}]
        /PRESORTED
        /DOCUMENT
        /MISSING=COLUMNWISE
        /BREAK=@var{var_list}
        /@var{dest_var}['@var{label}']@dots{}=@var{agr_func}(@var{src_vars}, @var{args}@dots{})@dots{}
@end display

@cmd{AGGREGATE} summarizes groups of cases into single cases.
Cases are divided into groups that have the same values for one or more
variables called @dfn{break variables}.  Several functions are available
for summarizing case contents.

The @subcmd{OUTFILE} subcommand is required and must appear first.  Specify a
system file or portable file by file name or file
handle (@pxref{File Handles}), or a dataset by its name
(@pxref{Datasets}).
The aggregated cases are written to this file.  If @samp{*} is
specified, then the aggregated cases replace the active dataset's data.
Use of @subcmd{OUTFILE} to write a portable file is a @pspp{} extension.

If @subcmd{OUTFILE=*} is given, then the subcommand @subcmd{MODE} may also be
specified.
The mode subcommand has two possible values: @subcmd{ADDVARIABLES} or @subcmd{REPLACE}.
In @subcmd{REPLACE} mode, the entire active dataset is replaced by a new dataset
which contains just the break variables and the destination varibles.
In this mode, the new file will contain as many cases as there are
unique combinations of the break variables.
In @subcmd{ADDVARIABLES} mode, the destination variables will be appended to 
the existing active dataset.
Cases which have identical combinations of values in their break
variables, will receive identical values for the destination variables.
The number of cases in the active dataset will remain unchanged.
Note that if @subcmd{ADDVARIABLES} is specified, then the data @emph{must} be
sorted on the break variables.

By default, the active dataset will be sorted based on the break variables
before aggregation takes place.  If the active dataset is already sorted
or otherwise grouped in terms of the break variables, specify
@subcmd{PRESORTED} to save time.
@subcmd{PRESORTED} is assumed if @subcmd{MODE=ADDVARIABLES} is used.

Specify @subcmd{DOCUMENT} to copy the documents from the active dataset into the
aggregate file (@pxref{DOCUMENT}).  Otherwise, the aggregate file will
not contain any documents, even if the aggregate file replaces the
active dataset.

Normally, only a single case (for @subcmd{SD} and @subcmd{SD}., two cases) need be
non-missing in each group for the aggregate variable to be
non-missing.  Specifying @subcmd{/MISSING=COLUMNWISE} inverts this behavior, so
that the aggregate variable becomes missing if any aggregated value is
missing.

If @subcmd{PRESORTED}, @subcmd{DOCUMENT}, or @subcmd{MISSING} are specified, they must appear
between @subcmd{OUTFILE} and @subcmd{BREAK}.

At least one break variable must be specified on @subcmd{BREAK}, a
required subcommand.  The values of these variables are used to divide
the active dataset into groups to be summarized.  In addition, at least
one @var{dest_var} must be specified.

One or more sets of aggregation variables must be specified.  Each set
comprises a list of aggregation variables, an equals sign (@samp{=}),
the name of an aggregation function (see the list below), and a list
of source variables in parentheses.  Some aggregation functions expect
additional arguments following the source variable names.

Aggregation variables typically are created with no variable label,
value labels, or missing values.  Their default print and write
formats depend on the aggregation function used, with details given in
the table below.  A variable label for an aggregation variable may be
specified just after the variable's name in the aggregation variable
list.

Each set must have exactly as many source variables as aggregation
variables.  Each aggregation variable receives the results of applying
the specified aggregation function to the corresponding source
variable.  The @subcmd{MEAN}, @subcmd{MEDIAN}, @subcmd{SD}, and @subcmd{SUM}
aggregation functions may only be
applied to numeric variables.  All the rest may be applied to numeric
and string variables.

The available aggregation functions are as follows:

@table @asis
@item @subcmd{FGT(@var{var_name}, @var{value})}
Fraction of values greater than the specified constant.  The default
format is F5.3.

@item @subcmd{FIN(@var{var_name}, @var{low}, @var{high})}
Fraction of values within the specified inclusive range of constants.
The default format is F5.3.

@item @subcmd{FLT(@var{var_name}, @var{value})}
Fraction of values less than the specified constant.  The default
format is F5.3.

@item @subcmd{FIRST(@var{var_name})}
First non-missing value in break group.  The aggregation variable
receives the complete dictionary information from the source variable.
The sort performed by @cmd{AGGREGATE} (and by @cmd{SORT CASES}) is stable, so that
the first case with particular values for the break variables before
sorting will also be the first case in that break group after sorting.

@item @subcmd{FOUT(@var{var_name}, @var{low}, @var{high})}
Fraction of values strictly outside the specified range of constants.
The default format is F5.3.

@item @subcmd{LAST(@var{var_name})}
Last non-missing value in break group.  The aggregation variable
receives the complete dictionary information from the source variable.
The sort performed by @cmd{AGGREGATE} (and by @cmd{SORT CASES}) is stable, so that
the last case with particular values for the break variables before
sorting will also be the last case in that break group after sorting.

@item @subcmd{MAX(@var{var_name})}
Maximum value.  The aggregation variable receives the complete
dictionary information from the source variable.

@item @subcmd{MEAN(@var{var_name})}
Arithmetic mean.  Limited to numeric values.  The default format is
F8.2.

@item @subcmd{MEDIAN(@var{var_name})}
The median value.  Limited to numeric values.  The default format is F8.2.

@item @subcmd{MIN(@var{var_name})}
Minimum value.  The aggregation variable receives the complete
dictionary information from the source variable.

@item @subcmd{N(@var{var_name})}
Number of non-missing values.  The default format is F7.0 if weighting
is not enabled, F8.2 if it is (@pxref{WEIGHT}).

@item @subcmd{N}
Number of cases aggregated to form this group.  The default format is
F7.0 if weighting is not enabled, F8.2 if it is (@pxref{WEIGHT}).

@item @subcmd{NMISS(@var{var_name})}
Number of missing values.  The default format is F7.0 if weighting is
not enabled, F8.2 if it is (@pxref{WEIGHT}).

@item @subcmd{NU(@var{var_name})}
Number of non-missing values.  Each case is considered to have a weight
of 1, regardless of the current weighting variable (@pxref{WEIGHT}).
The default format is F7.0.

@item @subcmd{NU}
Number of cases aggregated to form this group.  Each case is considered
to have a weight of 1, regardless of the current weighting variable.
The default format is F7.0.

@item @subcmd{NUMISS(@var{var_name})}
Number of missing values.  Each case is considered to have a weight of
1, regardless of the current weighting variable.  The default format is F7.0.

@item @subcmd{PGT(@var{var_name}, @var{value})}
Percentage between 0 and 100 of values greater than the specified
constant.  The default format is F5.1.

@item @subcmd{PIN(@var{var_name}, @var{low}, @var{high})}
Percentage of values within the specified inclusive range of
constants.  The default format is F5.1.

@item @subcmd{PLT(@var{var_name}, @var{value})}
Percentage of values less than the specified constant.  The default
format is F5.1.

@item @subcmd{POUT(@var{var_name}, @var{low}, @var{high})}
Percentage of values strictly outside the specified range of
constants.  The default format is F5.1.

@item @subcmd{SD(@var{var_name})}
Standard deviation of the mean.  Limited to numeric values.  The
default format is F8.2.

@item @subcmd{SUM(@var{var_name})}
Sum.  Limited to numeric values.  The default format is F8.2.
@end table

Aggregation functions compare string values in terms of internal
character codes.
On most modern computers, this is  @acronym{ASCII} or a superset thereof.

The aggregation functions listed above exclude all user-missing values
from calculations.  To include user-missing values, insert a period
(@samp{.}) at the end of the function name.  (e.g.@: @samp{SUM.}).
(Be aware that specifying such a function as the last token on a line
will cause the period to be interpreted as the end of the command.)

@cmd{AGGREGATE} both ignores and cancels the current @cmd{SPLIT FILE}
settings (@pxref{SPLIT FILE}).

@node AUTORECODE
@section AUTORECODE
@vindex AUTORECODE

@display
AUTORECODE VARIABLES=@var{src_vars} INTO @var{dest_vars}
        [ /DESCENDING ]
        [ /PRINT ]
        [ /GROUP ]
        [ /BLANK = @{VALID, MISSING@} ]
@end display

The @cmd{AUTORECODE} procedure considers the @var{n} values that a variable
takes on and maps them onto values 1@dots{}@var{n} on a new numeric
variable.

Subcommand @subcmd{VARIABLES} is the only required subcommand and must come
first.  Specify @subcmd{VARIABLES}, an equals sign (@samp{=}), a list of source
variables, @subcmd{INTO}, and a list of target variables.  There must the same
number of source and target variables.  The target variables must not
already exist.

By default, increasing values of a source variable (for a string, this
is based on character code comparisons) are recoded to increasing values
of its target variable.  To cause increasing values of a source variable
to be recoded to decreasing values of its target variable (@var{n} down
to 1), specify @subcmd{DESCENDING}.

@subcmd{PRINT} is currently ignored.

The @subcmd{GROUP} subcommand is relevant only if more than one variable is to be
recoded.   It causes a single mapping between source and target values to
be used, instead of one map per variable.

If @subcmd{/BLANK=MISSING} is given, then string variables which contain only 
whitespace are recoded as SYSMIS.  If @subcmd{/BLANK=VALID} is given then they
will be allocated a value like any other.  @subcmd{/BLANK} is not relevant
to numeric values. @subcmd{/BLANK=VALID} is the default.

@cmd{AUTORECODE} is a procedure.  It causes the data to be read.

@node COMPUTE
@section COMPUTE
@vindex COMPUTE

@display
COMPUTE @var{variable} = @var{expression}.
@end display
  or
@display
COMPUTE vector(@var{index}) = @var{expression}.
@end display

@cmd{COMPUTE} assigns the value of an expression to a target
variable.  For each case, the expression is evaluated and its value
assigned to the target variable.  Numeric and string
variables may be assigned.  When a string expression's width differs
from the target variable's width, the string result of the expression
is truncated or padded with spaces on the right as necessary.  The
expression and variable types must match.

For numeric variables only, the target variable need not already
exist.  Numeric variables created by @cmd{COMPUTE} are assigned an
@code{F8.2} output format.  String variables must be declared before
they can be used as targets for @cmd{COMPUTE}.

The target variable may be specified as an element of a vector
(@pxref{VECTOR}).  In this case, an expression @var{index} must be
specified in parentheses following the vector name.  The expression @var{index}
must evaluate to a numeric value that, after rounding down
to the nearest integer, is a valid index for the named vector.

Using @cmd{COMPUTE} to assign to a variable specified on @cmd{LEAVE}
(@pxref{LEAVE}) resets the variable's left state.  Therefore,
@code{LEAVE} should be specified following @cmd{COMPUTE}, not before.

@cmd{COMPUTE} is a transformation.  It does not cause the active dataset to be
read.

When @cmd{COMPUTE} is specified following @cmd{TEMPORARY}
(@pxref{TEMPORARY}), the @cmd{LAG} function may not be used
(@pxref{LAG}).

@node COUNT
@section COUNT
@vindex COUNT

@display
COUNT @var{var_name} = @var{var}@dots{} (@var{value}@dots{}).

Each @var{value} takes one of the following forms:
        @var{number}
        @var{string}
        @var{num1} THRU @var{num2}
        MISSING
        SYSMIS
where @var{num1} is a numeric expression or the words @subcmd{LO}  or @subcmd{LOWEST}
      and @var{num2} is a numeric expression  or @subcmd{HI} or @subcmd{HIGHEST}.
@end display

@cmd{COUNT} creates or replaces a numeric @dfn{target} variable that
counts the occurrence of a @dfn{criterion} value or set of values over
one or more @dfn{test} variables for each case.

The target variable values are always nonnegative integers.  They are
never missing.  The target variable is assigned an F8.2 output format.
@xref{Input and Output Formats}.  Any variables, including
string variables, may be test variables.

User-missing values of test variables are treated just like any other
values.  They are @strong{not} treated as system-missing values.
User-missing values that are criterion values or inside ranges of
criterion values are counted as any other values.  However (for numeric
variables), keyword @subcmd{MISSING} may be used to refer to all system-
and user-missing values.

@cmd{COUNT} target variables are assigned values in the order
specified.  In the command @subcmd{COUNT @var{A}=@var{A} @var{B}(1) /@var{B}=@var{A} @var{B}(2).}, the
following actions occur:

@itemize @minus
@item
The number of occurrences of 1 between @var{A} and @var{B} is counted.

@item
@var{A} is assigned this value.

@item
The number of occurrences of 1 between @var{B} and the @strong{new}
value of @var{A} is counted.

@item
@var{B} is assigned this value.
@end itemize

Despite this ordering, all @cmd{COUNT} criterion variables must exist
before the procedure is executed---they may not be created as target
variables earlier in the command!  Break such a command into two
separate commands.

The examples below may help to clarify.

@enumerate A
@item
Assuming @code{Q0}, @code{Q2}, @dots{}, @code{Q9} are numeric variables,
the following commands:

@enumerate
@item
Count the number of times the value 1 occurs through these variables
for each case and assigns the count to variable @code{QCOUNT}.  

@item
Print out the total number of times the value 1 occurs throughout
@emph{all} cases using @cmd{DESCRIPTIVES}.  @xref{DESCRIPTIVES}, for
details.
@end enumerate

@example
COUNT QCOUNT=Q0 TO Q9(1).
DESCRIPTIVES QCOUNT /STATISTICS=SUM.
@end example

@item
Given these same variables, the following commands:

@enumerate
@item
Count the number of valid values of these variables for each case and
assigns the count to variable @code{QVALID}.

@item
Multiplies each value of @code{QVALID} by 10 to obtain a percentage of
valid values, using @cmd{COMPUTE}.  @xref{COMPUTE}, for details.

@item
Print out the percentage of valid values across all cases, using
@cmd{DESCRIPTIVES}.  @xref{DESCRIPTIVES}, for details.
@end enumerate

@example
COUNT QVALID=Q0 TO Q9 (LO THRU HI).
COMPUTE QVALID=QVALID*10.
DESCRIPTIVES QVALID /STATISTICS=MEAN.
@end example
@end enumerate

@node FLIP
@section FLIP
@vindex FLIP

@display
FLIP /VARIABLES=@var{var_list} /NEWNAMES=@var{var_name}.
@end display

@cmd{FLIP} transposes rows and columns in the active dataset.  It
causes cases to be swapped with variables, and vice versa.

All variables in the transposed active dataset are numeric.  String
variables take on the system-missing value in the transposed file.

@subcmd{N} subcommands are required.  If specified, the @subcmd{VARIABLES} subcommand
selects variables to be transformed into cases, and variables not
specified are discarded.  If the @subcmd{VARIABLES} subcommand is omitted, all
variables are selected for transposition.

The variables specified by @subcmd{NEWNAMES}, which must be a
string variable, is
used to give names to the variables created by @cmd{FLIP}.  Only the
first 8 characters of the variable are used.  If
@subcmd{NEWNAMES} is not
specified then the default is a variable named CASE_LBL, if it exists.
If it does not then the variables created by @cmd{FLIP} are named VAR000
through VAR999, then VAR1000, VAR1001, and so on.

When a @subcmd{NEWNAMES} variable is available, the names must be canonicalized
before becoming variable names.  Invalid characters are replaced by
letter @samp{V} in the first position, or by @samp{_} in subsequent
positions.  If the name thus generated is not unique, then numeric
extensions are added, starting with 1, until a unique name is found or
there are no remaining possibilities.  If the latter occurs then the
@cmd{FLIP} operation aborts.

The resultant dictionary contains a CASE_LBL variable, a string
variable of width 8, which stores the names of the variables in the
dictionary before the transposition.  Variables names longer than 8
characters are truncated.  If the active dataset is subsequently
transposed using @cmd{FLIP}, this variable can be used to recreate the
original variable names.

@cmd{FLIP} honors @cmd{N OF CASES} (@pxref{N OF CASES}).  It ignores
@cmd{TEMPORARY} (@pxref{TEMPORARY}), so that ``temporary''
transformations become permanent.

@node IF
@section IF
@vindex IF

@display
IF @var{condition} @var{variable}=@var{expression}.
@end display
  or
@display
IF @var{condition} vector(@var{index})=@var{expression}.
@end display

The @cmd{IF} transformation conditionally assigns the value of a target
expression to a target variable, based on the truth of a test
expression.

Specify a boolean-valued expression (@pxref{Expressions}) to be tested
following the @cmd{IF} keyword.  This expression is evaluated for each case.
If the value is true, then the value of the expression is computed and
assigned to the specified variable.  If the value is false or missing,
nothing is done.  Numeric and string variables may be
assigned.  When a string expression's width differs from the target
variable's width, the string result of the expression is truncated or
padded with spaces on the right as necessary.  The expression and
variable types must match.

The target variable may be specified as an element of a vector
(@pxref{VECTOR}).  In this case, a vector index expression must be
specified in parentheses following the vector name.  The index
expression must evaluate to a numeric value that, after rounding down
to the nearest integer, is a valid index for the named vector.

Using @cmd{IF} to assign to a variable specified on @cmd{LEAVE}
(@pxref{LEAVE}) resets the variable's left state.  Therefore,
@code{LEAVE} should be specified following @cmd{IF}, not before.

When @cmd{IF} is specified following @cmd{TEMPORARY}
(@pxref{TEMPORARY}), the @cmd{LAG} function may not be used
(@pxref{LAG}).

@node RECODE
@section RECODE
@vindex RECODE

The @cmd{RECODE} command is used to transform existing values into other,
user specified values.
The general form is:

@display
RECODE @var{src_vars}
        (@var{src_value} @var{src_value} @dots{} = @var{dest_value})
        (@var{src_value} @var{src_value} @dots{} = @var{dest_value})
        (@var{src_value} @var{src_value} @dots{} = @var{dest_value}) @dots{}
         [INTO @var{dest_vars}].
@end display

Following the @cmd{RECODE} keyword itself comes @var{src_vars} which is a list
of variables whose values are to be transformed.
These variables may be string variables or they may be numeric.
However the list must be homogeneous; you may not mix string variables and
numeric variables in the same recoding.

After the list of source variables, there should be one or more @dfn{mappings}.
Each mapping is enclosed in parentheses, and contains the source values and
a destination value separated by a single @samp{=}.
The source values are used to specify the values in the dataset which 
need to change, and the destination value specifies the new value
to which they should be changed.
Each @var{src_value} may take one of the following forms:
@table @asis
@item @var{number}
If the source variables are numeric then @var{src_value} may be a literal
number.
@item @var{string}
If the source variables are string variables then @var{src_value} may be a
literal string (like all strings, enclosed in single or double quotes).
@item @var{num1} THRU @var{num2}
This form is valid only when the source variables are numeric.
It specifies all values in the range between @var{num1} and @var{num2},
including both endpoints of the range.  By convention, @var{num1}
should be less than @var{num2}.
Open-ended ranges may be specified using @samp{LO} or @samp{LOWEST} 
for @var{num1}
or @samp{HI} or @samp{HIGHEST} for @var{num2}.
@item @samp{MISSING}
The literal keyword @samp{MISSING} matches both system missing and user
missing values.
It is valid for both numeric and string variables.
@item @samp{SYSMIS}
The literal keyword @samp{SYSMIS} matches system missing
values.
It is valid for both numeric variables only.
@item @samp{ELSE}
The @samp{ELSE} keyword may be used to match any values which are
not matched by any other @var{src_value} appearing in the command.
If this keyword appears, it should be used in the last mapping of the 
command.
@end table

After the source variables comes an @samp{=} and then the @var{dest_value}.
The @var{dest_value} may take any of the following forms:
@table @asis
@item @var{number}
A literal numeric value to which the source values should be changed.
This implies the destination variable must be numeric.
@item @var{string}
A literal string value (enclosed in quotation marks) to which the source
values should be changed.
This implies the destination variable must be a string variable.
@item @samp{SYSMIS}
The keyword @samp{SYSMIS} changes the value to the system missing value.
This implies the destination variable must be numeric.
@item @samp{COPY}
The special keyword @samp{COPY} means that the source value should not be
modified, but
copied directly to the destination value.
This is meaningful only if @samp{INTO @var{dest_vars}} is specified.
@end table

Mappings are considered from left to right.
Therefore, if a value is matched by a @var{src_value} from more than 
one mapping, the first (leftmost) mapping which matches will be considered.
Any subsequent matches will be ignored.

The clause @samp{INTO @var{dest_vars}} is optional.
The behaviour of the command is slightly different depending on whether it
appears or not.

If @samp{INTO @var{dest_vars}} does not appear, then values will be recoded
``in place''.
This means that the recoded values are written back to the
source variables from whence the original values came.
In this case, the @var{dest_value} for every mapping must imply a value which
has the same type as the @var{src_value}.
For example, if the source value is a string value, it is not permissible for
@var{dest_value} to be @samp{SYSMIS} or another forms which implies a numeric
result.
It is also not permissible for @var{dest_value} to be  longer than the width
of the source variable.

The following example two numeric variables @var{x} and @var{y} are recoded
in place.
Zero is recoded to 99, the values 1 to 10 inclusive are unchanged,
values 1000 and higher are recoded to the system-missing value and all other
values are changed to 999:
@example
recode @var{x} @var{y} 
        (0 = 99)
        (1 THRU 10 = COPY)
        (1000 THRU HIGHEST = SYSMIS)
        (ELSE = 999).
@end example

If @samp{INTO @var{dest_vars}} is given, then recoded values are written
into the variables specified in @var{dest_vars}, which must therefore
 contain a list of valid variable names.
The number of variables in @var{dest_vars} must be the same as the number
of variables in @var{src_vars}
and the respective order of the variables in @var{dest_vars} corresponds to 
the order of @var{src_vars}.
That is to say, recoded values whose 
original value came from the @var{n}th variable in @var{src_vars} will be
placed into the @var{n}th variable in @var{dest_vars}.
The source variables will be unchanged.
If any mapping implies a string as its destination value, then the respective
destination variable must already exist, or 
have been declared using @cmd{STRING} or another transformation.
Numeric variables however will be automatically created if they don't already
exist.
The following example deals with two source variables, @var{a} and @var{b}
which contain string values.  Hence there are two destination variables
@var{v1} and @var{v2}.
Any cases where @var{a} or @var{b} contain the values @samp{apple}, 
@samp{pear} or @samp{pomegranate} will result in @var{v1} or @var{v2} being
filled with the string @samp{fruit} whilst cases with 
@samp{tomato}, @samp{lettuce} or @samp{carrot} will result in @samp{vegetable}.
Any other values will produce the result @samp{unknown}:
@example
string @var{v1} (a20).
string @var{v2} (a20).

recode @var{a} @var{b} 
        ("apple" "pear" "pomegranate" = "fruit")
        ("tomato" "lettuce" "carrot" = "vegetable")
        (ELSE = "unknown")
        into @var{v1} @var{v2}.
@end example

There is one very special mapping, not mentioned above.
If the source variable is a string variable
then a mapping may be specified as @samp{(CONVERT)}.
This mapping, if it appears must be the last mapping given and
the @samp{INTO @var{dest_vars}} clause must also be given and 
must not refer to a string variable. 
@samp{CONVERT} causes a number specified as a string to
be converted to a numeric value. 
For example it will convert the string @samp{"3"} into the numeric
value 3 (note that it will not convert @samp{three} into 3).
If the string cannot be parsed as a number, then the system-missing value
is assigned instead.
In the following example, cases where the value of @var{x} (a string variable)
is the empty string, are recoded to 999 and all others are converted to the
numeric equivalent of the input value.  The results are placed into the 
numeric variable @var{y}:
@example
recode @var{x} 
       ("" = 999)
        (convert)
        into @var{y}.
@end example

It is possible to specify multiple recodings on a single command.
Introduce additional recodings with a slash (@samp{/}) to
separate them from the previous recodings:
@example
recode 
        @var{a}  (2 = 22) (else = 99) 
        /@var{b} (1 = 3) into @var{z}
        .
@end example
@noindent Here we have two recodings. The first affects the source variable
@var{a} and recodes in-place the value 2 into 22 and all other values to 99.
The second recoding copies the values of @var{b} into the variable @var{z}, 
changing any instances of 1 into 3.

@node SORT CASES
@section SORT CASES
@vindex SORT CASES

@display
SORT CASES BY @var{var_list}[(@{D|A@}] [ @var{var_list}[(@{D|A@}] ] ...
@end display

@cmd{SORT CASES} sorts the active dataset by the values of one or more
variables.

Specify @subcmd{BY} and a list of variables to sort by.  By default, variables
are sorted in ascending order.  To override sort order, specify @subcmd{(D)} or
@subcmd{(DOWN)} after a list of variables to get descending order, or @subcmd{(A)} or @subcmd{(UP)}
for ascending order.  These apply to all the listed variables
up until the preceding @subcmd{(A)}, @subcmd{(D)}, @subcmd{(UP)} or @subcmd{(DOWN)}.

The sort algorithms used by @cmd{SORT CASES} are stable.  That is,
records that have equal values of the sort variables will have the
same relative order before and after sorting.  As a special case,
re-sorting an already sorted file will not affect the ordering of
cases.

@cmd{SORT CASES} is a procedure.  It causes the data to be read.

@cmd{SORT CASES} attempts to sort the entire active dataset in main memory.
If workspace is exhausted, it falls back to a merge sort algorithm that
involves creates numerous temporary files.

@cmd{SORT CASES} may not be specified following @cmd{TEMPORARY}.