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<img src="../logo.svg" class="logo" alt=""><h1>How to import data from SPSS / SAS / Stata</h1>
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<h4 data-toc-skip class="author">Dr. Matthijs
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Berends</h4>
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<h4 data-toc-skip class="date">12 February 2023</h4>
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<small class="dont-index">Source: <a href="https://github.com/msberends/AMR/blob/HEAD/vignettes/SPSS.Rmd" class="external-link"><code>vignettes/SPSS.Rmd</code></a></small>
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<div class="d-none name"><code>SPSS.Rmd</code></div>
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<div class="section level2">
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<h2 id="spss-sas-stata">SPSS / SAS / Stata<a class="anchor" aria-label="anchor" href="#spss-sas-stata"></a>
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</h2>
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<p>SPSS (Statistical Package for the Social Sciences) is probably the
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most well-known software package for statistical analysis. SPSS is
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easier to learn than R, because in SPSS you only have to click a menu to
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run parts of your analysis. Because of its user-friendliness, it is
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taught at universities and particularly useful for students who are new
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to statistics. From my experience, I would guess that pretty much all
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(bio)medical students know it at the time they graduate. SAS and Stata
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are comparable statistical packages popular in big industries.</p>
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</div>
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<div class="section level2">
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<h2 id="compared-to-r">Compared to R<a class="anchor" aria-label="anchor" href="#compared-to-r"></a>
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</h2>
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<p>As said, SPSS is easier to learn than R. But SPSS, SAS and Stata come
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with major downsides when comparing it with R:</p>
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<ul>
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<li>
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<p><strong>R is highly modular.</strong></p>
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<p>The <a href="https://cran.r-project.org/" class="external-link">official R network
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(CRAN)</a> features more than 16,000 packages at the time of writing,
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our <code>AMR</code> package being one of them. All these packages were
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peer-reviewed before publication. Aside from this official channel,
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there are also developers who choose not to submit to CRAN, but rather
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keep it on their own public repository, like GitHub. So there may even
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be a lot more than 14,000 packages out there.</p>
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<p>Bottom line is, you can really extend it yourself or ask somebody to
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do this for you. Take for example our <code>AMR</code> package. Among
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other things, it adds reliable reference data to R to help you with the
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data cleaning and analysis. SPSS, SAS and Stata will never know what a
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valid MIC value is or what the Gram stain of <em>E. coli</em> is. Or
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that all species of <em>Klebiella</em> are resistant to amoxicillin and
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that Floxapen<sup>®</sup> is a trade name of flucloxacillin. These facts
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and properties are often needed to clean existing data, which would be
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very inconvenient in a software package without reliable reference data.
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See below for a demonstration.</p>
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</li>
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<li>
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<p><strong>R is extremely flexible.</strong></p>
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<p>Because you write the syntax yourself, you can do anything you want.
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The flexibility in transforming, arranging, grouping and summarising
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data, or drawing plots, is endless - with SPSS, SAS or Stata you are
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bound to their algorithms and format styles. They may be a bit flexible,
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but you can probably never create that very specific publication-ready
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plot without using other (paid) software. If you sometimes write
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syntaxes in SPSS to run a complete analysis or to ‘automate’ some of
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your work, you could do this a lot less time in R. You will notice that
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writing syntaxes in R is a lot more nifty and clever than in SPSS.
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Still, as working with any statistical package, you will have to have
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knowledge about what you are doing (statistically) and what you are
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willing to accomplish.</p>
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</li>
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<li>
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<p><strong>R can be easily automated.</strong></p>
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<p>Over the last years, <a href="https://rmarkdown.rstudio.com/" class="external-link">R
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Markdown</a> has really made an interesting development. With R
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Markdown, you can very easily produce reports, whether the format has to
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be Word, PowerPoint, a website, a PDF document or just the raw data to
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Excel. It even allows the use of a reference file containing the layout
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style (e.g. fonts and colours) of your organisation. I use this a lot to
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generate weekly and monthly reports automatically. Just write the code
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once and enjoy the automatically updated reports at any interval you
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like.</p>
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<p>For an even more professional environment, you could create <a href="https://shiny.rstudio.com/" class="external-link">Shiny apps</a>: live manipulation of
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data using a custom made website. The webdesign knowledge needed
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(JavaScript, CSS, HTML) is almost <em>zero</em>.</p>
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</li>
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<li>
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<p><strong>R has a huge community.</strong></p>
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<p>Many R users just ask questions on websites like <a href="https://stackoverflow.com" class="external-link">StackOverflow.com</a>, the largest
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online community for programmers. At the time of writing, <a href="https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/r?sort=votes" class="external-link">480 788
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R-related questions</a> have already been asked on this platform (that
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covers questions and answers for any programming language). In my own
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experience, most questions are answered within a couple of
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minutes.</p>
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</li>
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<li>
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<p><strong>R understands any data type, including
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SPSS/SAS/Stata.</strong></p>
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<p>And that’s not vice versa I’m afraid. You can import data from any
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source into R. For example from SPSS, SAS and Stata (<a href="https://haven.tidyverse.org/" class="external-link">link</a>), from Minitab, Epi Info
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and EpiData (<a href="https://cran.r-project.org/package=foreign" class="external-link">link</a>), from Excel
|
||
(<a href="https://readxl.tidyverse.org/" class="external-link">link</a>), from flat files like
|
||
CSV, TXT or TSV (<a href="https://readr.tidyverse.org/" class="external-link">link</a>), or
|
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directly from databases and datawarehouses from anywhere on the world
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(<a href="https://dbplyr.tidyverse.org/" class="external-link">link</a>). You can even scrape
|
||
websites to download tables that are live on the internet (<a href="https://github.com/hadley/rvest" class="external-link">link</a>) or get the results of
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an API call and transform it into data in only one command (<a href="https://github.com/Rdatatable/data.table/wiki/Convenience-features-of-fread" class="external-link">link</a>).</p>
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<p>And the best part - you can export from R to most data formats as
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well. So you can import an SPSS file, do your analysis neatly in R and
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export the resulting tables to Excel files for sharing.</p>
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</li>
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<li>
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<p><strong>R is completely free and open-source.</strong></p>
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<p>No strings attached. It was created and is being maintained by
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volunteers who believe that (data) science should be open and publicly
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available to everybody. SPSS, SAS and Stata are quite expensive. IBM
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||
SPSS Staticstics only comes with subscriptions nowadays, varying <a href="https://www.ibm.com/products/spss-statistics/pricing" class="external-link">between USD
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1,300 and USD 8,500</a> per user <em>per year</em>. SAS Analytics Pro
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costs <a href="https://www.sas.com/store/products-solutions/sas-analytics-pro/prodPERSANL.html" class="external-link">around
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||
USD 10,000</a> per computer. Stata also has a business model with
|
||
subscription fees, varying <a href="https://www.stata.com/order/new/bus/single-user-licenses/dl/" class="external-link">between
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USD 600 and USD 2,800</a> per computer per year, but lower prices come
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||
with a limitation of the number of variables you can work with. And
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still they do not offer the above benefits of R.</p>
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||
<p>If you are working at a midsized or small company, you can save it
|
||
tens of thousands of dollars by using R instead of e.g. SPSS - gaining
|
||
even more functions and flexibility. And all R enthousiasts can do as
|
||
much PR as they want (like I do here), because nobody is officially
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||
associated with or affiliated by R. It is really free.</p>
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||
</li>
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<li>
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<p><strong>R is (nowadays) the preferred analysis software in
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academic papers.</strong></p>
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<p>At present, R is among the world most powerful statistical languages,
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and it is generally very popular in science (Bollmann <em>et al.</em>,
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2017). For all the above reasons, the number of references to R as an
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analysis method in academic papers <a href="https://r4stats.com/2014/08/20/r-passes-spss-in-scholarly-use-stata-growing-rapidly/" class="external-link">is
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rising continuously</a> and has even surpassed SPSS for academic use
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(Muenchen, 2014).</p>
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<p>I believe that the thing with SPSS is, that it has always had a great
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||
user interface which is very easy to learn and use. Back when they
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||
developed it, they had very little competition, let alone from R. R
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||
didn’t even had a professional user interface until the last decade
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||
(called RStudio, see below). How people used R between the nineties and
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||
2010 is almost completely incomparable to how R is being used now. The
|
||
language itself <a href="https://www.tidyverse.org/packages/" class="external-link">has been
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||
restyled completely</a> by volunteers who are dedicated professionals in
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||
the field of data science. SPSS was great when there was nothing else
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||
that could compete. But now in 2023, I don’t see any reason why SPSS
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would be of any better use than R.</p>
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||
</li>
|
||
</ul>
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<p>To demonstrate the first point:</p>
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||
<div class="sourceCode" id="cb1"><pre class="downlit sourceCode r">
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||
<code class="sourceCode R"><span><span class="co"># not all values are valid MIC values:</span></span>
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||
<span><span class="fu"><a href="../reference/as.mic.html">as.mic</a></span><span class="op">(</span><span class="fl">0.125</span><span class="op">)</span></span>
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||
<span><span class="co"># Class 'mic'</span></span>
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<span><span class="co"># [1] 0.125</span></span>
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||
<span><span class="fu"><a href="../reference/as.mic.html">as.mic</a></span><span class="op">(</span><span class="st">"testvalue"</span><span class="op">)</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># Class 'mic'</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># [1] <NA></span></span>
|
||
<span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># the Gram stain is available for all bacteria:</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu"><a href="../reference/mo_property.html">mo_gramstain</a></span><span class="op">(</span><span class="st">"E. coli"</span><span class="op">)</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># [1] "Gram-negative"</span></span>
|
||
<span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># Klebsiella is intrinsic resistant to amoxicillin, according to EUCAST:</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="va">klebsiella_test</span> <span class="op"><-</span> <span class="fu"><a href="https://rdrr.io/r/base/data.frame.html" class="external-link">data.frame</a></span><span class="op">(</span></span>
|
||
<span> mo <span class="op">=</span> <span class="st">"klebsiella"</span>,</span>
|
||
<span> amox <span class="op">=</span> <span class="st">"S"</span>,</span>
|
||
<span> stringsAsFactors <span class="op">=</span> <span class="cn">FALSE</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="op">)</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="va">klebsiella_test</span> <span class="co"># (our original data)</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># mo amox</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 1 klebsiella S</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu"><a href="../reference/eucast_rules.html">eucast_rules</a></span><span class="op">(</span><span class="va">klebsiella_test</span>, info <span class="op">=</span> <span class="cn">FALSE</span><span class="op">)</span> <span class="co"># (the edited data by EUCAST rules)</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># mo amox</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 1 klebsiella R</span></span>
|
||
<span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># hundreds of trade names can be translated to a name, trade name or an ATC code:</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu"><a href="../reference/ab_property.html">ab_name</a></span><span class="op">(</span><span class="st">"floxapen"</span><span class="op">)</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># [1] "Flucloxacillin"</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu"><a href="../reference/ab_property.html">ab_tradenames</a></span><span class="op">(</span><span class="st">"floxapen"</span><span class="op">)</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># [1] "culpen" "floxacillin" "floxacillin sodium" </span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># [4] "floxapen" "floxapen sodium salt" "fluclox" </span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># [7] "flucloxacilina" "flucloxacillin" "flucloxacilline" </span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># [10] "flucloxacillinum" "fluorochloroxacillin" "staphylex"</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu"><a href="../reference/ab_property.html">ab_atc</a></span><span class="op">(</span><span class="st">"floxapen"</span><span class="op">)</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># [1] "J01CF05"</span></span></code></pre></div>
|
||
</div>
|
||
<div class="section level2">
|
||
<h2 id="import-data-from-spsssasstata">Import data from SPSS/SAS/Stata<a class="anchor" aria-label="anchor" href="#import-data-from-spsssasstata"></a>
|
||
</h2>
|
||
<div class="section level3">
|
||
<h3 id="rstudio">RStudio<a class="anchor" aria-label="anchor" href="#rstudio"></a>
|
||
</h3>
|
||
<p>To work with R, probably the best option is to use <a href="https://www.rstudio.com/products/rstudio/" class="external-link">RStudio</a>. It is an
|
||
open-source and free desktop environment which not only allows you to
|
||
run R code, but also supports project management, version management,
|
||
package management and convenient import menus to work with other data
|
||
sources. You can also install <a href="https://www.rstudio.com/products/rstudio/" class="external-link">RStudio Server</a> on a
|
||
private or corporate server, which brings nothing less than the complete
|
||
RStudio software to you as a website (at home or at work).</p>
|
||
<p>To import a data file, just click <em>Import Dataset</em> in the
|
||
Environment tab:</p>
|
||
<p><img src="https://github.com/msberends/AMR/raw/main/docs/import1.png"></p>
|
||
<p>If additional packages are needed, RStudio will ask you if they
|
||
should be installed on beforehand.</p>
|
||
<p>In the the window that opens, you can define all options (parameters)
|
||
that should be used for import and you’re ready to go:</p>
|
||
<p><img src="https://github.com/msberends/AMR/raw/main/docs/import2.png"></p>
|
||
<p>If you want named variables to be imported as factors so it resembles
|
||
SPSS more, use <code>as_factor()</code>.</p>
|
||
<p>The difference is this:</p>
|
||
<div class="sourceCode" id="cb2"><pre class="downlit sourceCode r">
|
||
<code class="sourceCode R"><span><span class="va">SPSS_data</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># # A tibble: 4,203 x 4</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># v001 sex status statusage</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># <dbl> <dbl+lbl> <dbl+lbl> <dbl></span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 1 10002 1 1 76.6</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 2 10004 0 1 59.1</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 3 10005 1 1 54.5</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 4 10006 1 1 54.1</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 5 10007 1 1 57.7</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 6 10008 1 1 62.8</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 7 10010 0 1 63.7</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 8 10011 1 1 73.1</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 9 10017 1 1 56.7</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 10 10018 0 1 66.6</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># # ... with 4,193 more rows</span></span>
|
||
<span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu">as_factor</span><span class="op">(</span><span class="va">SPSS_data</span><span class="op">)</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># # A tibble: 4,203 x 4</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># v001 sex status statusage</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># <dbl> <fct> <fct> <dbl></span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 1 10002 Male alive 76.6</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 2 10004 Female alive 59.1</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 3 10005 Male alive 54.5</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 4 10006 Male alive 54.1</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 5 10007 Male alive 57.7</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 6 10008 Male alive 62.8</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 7 10010 Female alive 63.7</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 8 10011 Male alive 73.1</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 9 10017 Male alive 56.7</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># 10 10018 Female alive 66.6</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># # ... with 4,193 more rows</span></span></code></pre></div>
|
||
</div>
|
||
<div class="section level3">
|
||
<h3 id="base-r">Base R<a class="anchor" aria-label="anchor" href="#base-r"></a>
|
||
</h3>
|
||
<p>To import data from SPSS, SAS or Stata, you can use the <a href="https://haven.tidyverse.org/" class="external-link">great <code>haven</code> package</a>
|
||
yourself:</p>
|
||
<div class="sourceCode" id="cb3"><pre class="downlit sourceCode r">
|
||
<code class="sourceCode R"><span><span class="co"># download and install the latest version:</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu"><a href="https://rdrr.io/r/utils/install.packages.html" class="external-link">install.packages</a></span><span class="op">(</span><span class="st">"haven"</span><span class="op">)</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># load the package you just installed:</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="kw"><a href="https://rdrr.io/r/base/library.html" class="external-link">library</a></span><span class="op">(</span><span class="va"><a href="https://haven.tidyverse.org" class="external-link">haven</a></span><span class="op">)</span></span></code></pre></div>
|
||
<p>You can now import files as follows:</p>
|
||
<div class="section level4">
|
||
<h4 id="spss">SPSS<a class="anchor" aria-label="anchor" href="#spss"></a>
|
||
</h4>
|
||
<p>To read files from SPSS into R:</p>
|
||
<div class="sourceCode" id="cb4"><pre class="downlit sourceCode r">
|
||
<code class="sourceCode R"><span><span class="co"># read any SPSS file based on file extension (best way):</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu">read_spss</span><span class="op">(</span>file <span class="op">=</span> <span class="st">"path/to/file"</span><span class="op">)</span></span>
|
||
<span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># read .sav or .zsav file:</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu">read_sav</span><span class="op">(</span>file <span class="op">=</span> <span class="st">"path/to/file"</span><span class="op">)</span></span>
|
||
<span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># read .por file:</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu">read_por</span><span class="op">(</span>file <span class="op">=</span> <span class="st">"path/to/file"</span><span class="op">)</span></span></code></pre></div>
|
||
<p>Do not forget about <code>as_factor()</code>, as mentioned above.</p>
|
||
<p>To export your R objects to the SPSS file format:</p>
|
||
<div class="sourceCode" id="cb5"><pre class="downlit sourceCode r">
|
||
<code class="sourceCode R"><span><span class="co"># save as .sav file:</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu">write_sav</span><span class="op">(</span>data <span class="op">=</span> <span class="va">yourdata</span>, path <span class="op">=</span> <span class="st">"path/to/file"</span><span class="op">)</span></span>
|
||
<span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># save as compressed .zsav file:</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu">write_sav</span><span class="op">(</span>data <span class="op">=</span> <span class="va">yourdata</span>, path <span class="op">=</span> <span class="st">"path/to/file"</span>, compress <span class="op">=</span> <span class="cn">TRUE</span><span class="op">)</span></span></code></pre></div>
|
||
</div>
|
||
<div class="section level4">
|
||
<h4 id="sas">SAS<a class="anchor" aria-label="anchor" href="#sas"></a>
|
||
</h4>
|
||
<p>To read files from SAS into R:</p>
|
||
<div class="sourceCode" id="cb6"><pre class="downlit sourceCode r">
|
||
<code class="sourceCode R"><span><span class="co"># read .sas7bdat + .sas7bcat files:</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu">read_sas</span><span class="op">(</span>data_file <span class="op">=</span> <span class="st">"path/to/file"</span>, catalog_file <span class="op">=</span> <span class="cn">NULL</span><span class="op">)</span></span>
|
||
<span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># read SAS transport files (version 5 and version 8):</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu">read_xpt</span><span class="op">(</span>file <span class="op">=</span> <span class="st">"path/to/file"</span><span class="op">)</span></span></code></pre></div>
|
||
<p>To export your R objects to the SAS file format:</p>
|
||
<div class="sourceCode" id="cb7"><pre class="downlit sourceCode r">
|
||
<code class="sourceCode R"><span><span class="co"># save as regular SAS file:</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu">write_sas</span><span class="op">(</span>data <span class="op">=</span> <span class="va">yourdata</span>, path <span class="op">=</span> <span class="st">"path/to/file"</span><span class="op">)</span></span>
|
||
<span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># the SAS transport format is an open format</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># (required for submission of the data to the FDA)</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu">write_xpt</span><span class="op">(</span>data <span class="op">=</span> <span class="va">yourdata</span>, path <span class="op">=</span> <span class="st">"path/to/file"</span>, version <span class="op">=</span> <span class="fl">8</span><span class="op">)</span></span></code></pre></div>
|
||
</div>
|
||
<div class="section level4">
|
||
<h4 id="stata">Stata<a class="anchor" aria-label="anchor" href="#stata"></a>
|
||
</h4>
|
||
<p>To read files from Stata into R:</p>
|
||
<div class="sourceCode" id="cb8"><pre class="downlit sourceCode r">
|
||
<code class="sourceCode R"><span><span class="co"># read .dta file:</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu">read_stata</span><span class="op">(</span>file <span class="op">=</span> <span class="st">"/path/to/file"</span><span class="op">)</span></span>
|
||
<span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># works exactly the same:</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu">read_dta</span><span class="op">(</span>file <span class="op">=</span> <span class="st">"/path/to/file"</span><span class="op">)</span></span></code></pre></div>
|
||
<p>To export your R objects to the Stata file format:</p>
|
||
<div class="sourceCode" id="cb9"><pre class="downlit sourceCode r">
|
||
<code class="sourceCode R"><span><span class="co"># save as .dta file, Stata version 14:</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="co"># (supports Stata v8 until v15 at the time of writing)</span></span>
|
||
<span><span class="fu">write_dta</span><span class="op">(</span>data <span class="op">=</span> <span class="va">yourdata</span>, path <span class="op">=</span> <span class="st">"/path/to/file"</span>, version <span class="op">=</span> <span class="fl">14</span><span class="op">)</span></span></code></pre></div>
|
||
</div>
|
||
</div>
|
||
</div>
|
||
</main><aside class="col-md-3"><nav id="toc"><h2>On this page</h2>
|
||
</nav></aside>
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
<footer><div class="pkgdown-footer-left">
|
||
<p></p>
|
||
<p><code>AMR</code> (for R). Free and open-source, licenced under the <a target="_blank" href="https://github.com/msberends/AMR/blob/main/LICENSE" class="external-link">GNU General Public License version 2.0 (GPL-2)</a>.<br>Developed at the <a target="_blank" href="https://www.rug.nl" class="external-link">University of Groningen</a> and <a target="_blank" href="https://www.umcg.nl" class="external-link">University Medical Center Groningen</a> in The Netherlands.</p>
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
<div class="pkgdown-footer-right">
|
||
<p></p>
|
||
<p><a target="_blank" href="https://www.rug.nl" class="external-link"><img src="https://github.com/msberends/AMR/raw/main/pkgdown/logos/logo_rug.svg" style="max-width: 150px;"></a><a target="_blank" href="https://www.umcg.nl" class="external-link"><img src="https://github.com/msberends/AMR/raw/main/pkgdown/logos/logo_umcg.svg" style="max-width: 150px;"></a></p>
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
</footer>
|
||
</div>
|
||
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||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
</body>
|
||
</html>
|