Next: MCONVERT, Previous: Matrix Files, Up: Matrices [Contents][Index]
MATRIX DATA
VARIABLES=variables
[FILE={’file_name’ | INLINE}
[/FORMAT=[{LIST | FREE}]
[{UPPER | LOWER | FULL}]
[{DIAGONAL | NODIAGONAL}]]
[/SPLIT=split_vars]
[/FACTORS=factor_vars]
[/N=n]
The following subcommands are only needed when ROWTYPE_ is not
specified on the VARIABLES subcommand:
[/CONTENTS={CORR,COUNT,COV,DFE,MAT,MEAN,MSE,
N_MATRIX,N|N_VECTOR,N_SCALAR,PROX,SD|STDDEV}]
[/CELLS=n_cells]
The MATRIX DATA command convert matrices and vectors from text
format into the matrix file format (See Matrix Files) for use by
procedures that read matrices. It reads a text file or inline data
and outputs to the active file, replacing any data already in the
active dataset. The matrix file may then be used by other commands
directly from the active file, or it may be written to a .sav
file using the SAVE command.
The text data read by MATRIX DATA can be delimited by spaces or
commas. A plus or minus sign, except immediately following a ‘d’
or ‘e’, also begins a new value. Optionally, values may be
enclosed in single or double quotes.
MATRIX DATA can read the types of matrix and vector data
supported in matrix files (see Matrix File Row Types).
The FILE subcommand specifies the source of the command’s
input. To read input from a text file, specify its name in quotes.
To supply input inline, omit FILE or specify INLINE.
Inline data must directly follow MATRIX DATA, inside BEGIN
DATA (see BEGIN DATA).
VARIABLES is the only required subcommand. It names the
variables present in each input record in the order that they appear.
(MATRIX DATA reorders the variables in the matrix file it
produces, if needed to fit the matrix file format.) The variable list
must include split variables and factor variables, if they are present
in the data, in addition to the continuous variables that form matrix
rows and columns. It may also include a special variable named
ROWTYPE_.
Matrix data may include split variables or factor variables or both.
List split variables, if any, on the SPLIT subcommand and
factor variables, if any, on the FACTORS subcommand. Split
and factor variables must be numeric. Split and factor variables must
also be listed on VARIABLES, with one exception: if
VARIABLES does not include ROWTYPE_, then
SPLIT may name a single variable that is not in
VARIABLES (see MATRIX DATA Example 8).
The FORMAT subcommand accepts settings to describe the format
of the input data:
LIST (default)FREELIST requires each row to begin at the start of a new input line. FREE allows rows to begin in the middle of a line. Either setting allows a single row to continue across multiple input lines.
LOWER (default)UPPERFULLWith LOWER, only the lower triangle is read from the input data and the upper triangle is mirrored across the main diagonal. UPPER behaves similarly for the upper triangle. FULL reads the entire matrix.
DIAGONAL (default)NODIAGONALWith DIAGONAL, the main diagonal is read from the input data. With NODIAGONAL, which is incompatible with FULL, the main diagonal is not read from the input data but instead set to 1 for correlation matrices and system-missing for others.
The N subcommand is a way to specify the size of the
population. It is equivalent to specifying an N vector with
the specified value for each split file.
MATRIX DATA supports two different ways to indicate the kinds of
matrices and vectors present in the data, depending on whether a
variable with the special name ROWTYPE_ is present in
VARIABLES. The following subsections explain MATRIX DATA
syntax and behavior in each case.
Next: MCONVERT, Previous: Matrix Files, Up: Matrices [Contents][Index]