Tabulate multiple variables with common prefix using a local macro
Asked Answered
I

4

5

I have a number of variables whose name begins with the prefix indoor. What comes after indoor is not numeric (that would make everything simpler).

I would like a tabulation for each of these variables.

My code is the following:

local indoor indoor*  
foreach i of local indoor {  
    tab `i' group, col freq exact chi2  
}

The problem is that indoor in the foreach command resolves to indoor* and not to the list of the indoor questions, as I hoped. For this reason, the tab command is followed by too many variables (it can only handle two) and this results in an error.

The simple fix is to substitute the first command with:

local indoor <full list of indoor questions>

But this is what I would like to avoid, that is to have to find all the names for these variables and then paste them in the code. It seems there is a quicker fix for this but I can't think of any.

Ides answered 13/9, 2010 at 15:24 Comment(0)
E
1

You could do this with

foreach i of var `indoor' {
   tab `i' group, col freq exact chi2
}
Effortless answered 3/11, 2010 at 20:57 Comment(2)
This mixes up the syntax of -foreach- a bit. The help manual indicates that you want to use "foreach i of varlist var1 var2" where var1 and var2 are variables OR use "foreach i of local indoor", not combine them as in the example above. This works in this example, however, if you had a list in the local indoor' that did not adhere to the rules of naming variables in a -varlist-, then varlist expansion in "foreach i of var indoor'" would fail and leave the user confused.Adjoin
It's not SO bad, as long as you understand that Stata unpacks a local/global macro before executing the command.Effortless
A
8

The trick is to use ds or unab to create the varlist expansion before asking Stata to loop over values in the foreach loop.

Here's an example of each:

    ******************! BEGIN EXAMPLE

** THIS FIRST SECTION SIMPLY CREATES SOME FAKE DATA & INDOOR VARS **
    clear
    set obs 10000
    local suffix `c(ALPHA)'
    token `"`suffix'"'
    while "`1'" != "" {
        g indoor`1'`2'`3' =  1+int((5-1+1)*runiform())
        lab var indoor`1'`2'`3' "Indoor Values for `1'`2'`3'"
        mac shift 1
        }
    g group = rbinomial(1,.5)
    lab var group "GROUP TYPE"

** NOW, YOU SHOULD HAVE A BUNCH OF FAKE INDOOR 
**VARS WITH ALPHA, NOT NUMERIC SUFFIXES

desc  indoor*

**USE ds TO CREATE YOUR VARLIST FOR THE foreach LOOP:

    ds indoor*
    di "`r(varlist)'"
    local indoorvars `r(varlist)'

    local n  0
    foreach i of local indoorvars {

**LET'S CLEAN UP YOUR TABLES A BIT WITH SOME HEADERS VIA display

    local ++n
    di in red "--------------------------------------------"
    di in red "Table `n':  `:var l `i'' by `:var l group'"
    di in red "--------------------------------------------"

**YOUR tab TABLES

    tab `i' group, col freq chi2 exact nolog nokey
    }
    ******************! END EXAMPLE

OR using unab instead:

******************! BEGIN EXAMPLE
unab indoorvars: indoor*
di "`indoorvars'"

local n  0
foreach i of local indoorvars {
local ++n
di in red "--------------------------------------------"
di in red "Table `n':  `:var l `i'' by `:var l group'"
di in red "--------------------------------------------"

tab `i' group, col freq chi2 nokey  //I turned off exact to speed things up
}

******************! END EXAMPLE

The advantages of ds come into play if you want to select your indoor vars using a tricky selection rule, like selecting indoor vars based on information in the variable label or some other characteristic.

Adjoin answered 19/9, 2010 at 2:33 Comment(0)
E
1

You could do this with

foreach i of var `indoor' {
   tab `i' group, col freq exact chi2
}
Effortless answered 3/11, 2010 at 20:57 Comment(2)
This mixes up the syntax of -foreach- a bit. The help manual indicates that you want to use "foreach i of varlist var1 var2" where var1 and var2 are variables OR use "foreach i of local indoor", not combine them as in the example above. This works in this example, however, if you had a list in the local indoor' that did not adhere to the rules of naming variables in a -varlist-, then varlist expansion in "foreach i of var indoor'" would fail and leave the user confused.Adjoin
It's not SO bad, as long as you understand that Stata unpacks a local/global macro before executing the command.Effortless
E
1

This would work. It is almost identical to the code in the question.

unab indoor : indoor*
foreach i of local indoor {
  tab `i' group, col freq exact chi2
}
Effortless answered 19/10, 2011 at 19:33 Comment(0)
P
-1
foreach v of varlist indoo* {
do sth with `v'
}
Pearsall answered 15/10, 2011 at 8:52 Comment(0)

© 2022 - 2024 — McMap. All rights reserved.