similar to: importing from Stata

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 7000 matches similar to: "importing from Stata"

2001 Jul 12
1
Importing STATA files
I'm an R novice who is struggling with the importation STATA files into R. I've loaded "foreign" and tried the example based on the Swiss file, which works fine. I then placed a STATA file, auto6.dta, in my working directory, which is "C:\Program Files\R\rw1030\library\base\data". The following is what happened: > library(foreign) > read.dta(auto6) Error in
2014 Jan 23
2
Stata support in package foreign
As you know, Stata support in 'foreign' was frozen a while back at Stata version 12. R-core has received a request from a grad student to 'give top priority' to supporting Stata 13. That is not going to happen, not least because none of us has access to Stata. However, according to Stata's documentation both Stata 12 and 13 use format 115, so foreign::read.dta should be
2009 Dec 16
1
Stata files
I have a client who uses Stata 11. Can anyone advise me on ways of transferring data from this version of Stata to R? Reading the documentation for read.dta in package foreign it seems it only allows for versions up to Stata 10. I don't know Stata at all but a bit of poking around on their website led me to believe Stata 11 couldn't write in Stata 10 format. However Stata 11 can
2008 Mar 18
2
read.dta for files from stata 9.0
Dear R-helpers, if I want to read a .dta-file generated by stata 9.0 with read.dta (foreign), I get the message "not a stata version 5-8 .dta-file". I'm using R-2.6.2 and the latest version of the foreign package. Has someone any hint? With many thanks, Albrecht
2004 May 10
1
Explaining Survival difference between Stata and R
Dear Everybody: I'm doing my usual "how does that work in R" thing with some Stata projects. I find a gross gap between the Stata and R in Cox PH models, and I hope you can give me some pointers about what goes wrong. I'm getting signals from R/Survival that the model just can't be estimated, but Stata spits out numbers just fine. I wonder if I should specify initial
2003 Oct 06
1
Re: Use of the Foreign package to import Stata files
Long ago (Sat, 2 Nov 2002), Bill Hart <w.hart at sbcglobal.net> wrote: > An R newbie here. I am using R 1.6 currently and have > (successfully, I think) installed the Foreign package. > Tried to import a data file created with Stata 7.0 > SE. Had minor problems with syntax then R decided > that my file was not really a Stata file. It rejected > the file saying
2004 Nov 11
1
polr probit versus stata oprobit
Dear All, I have been struggling to understand why for the housing data in MASS library R and stata give coef. estimates that are really different. I also tried to come up with many many examples myself (see below, of course I did not have the set.seed command included) and all of my `random' examples seem to give verry similar output. For the housing data, I have changed the data into numeric
2009 Jun 29
2
Large Stata file Import in R
Hi I am using Stata 10 and I need to import a data set in stata 10 to R, I have saved the dataset in lower versions of Stata as well by using saveold command in Stata. My RAM is 4gb and the stata file is 600MB, I am getting an error message which says : "Error: cannot allocate vector of size 3.4 Mb In addition: There were 50 or more warnings (use warnings() to see the first 50)" Thus
2004 Apr 28
3
Possible bug in foreign library import of Stata datasets
Concerning this article, Christopher Zorn, "Generalized Estimating Equation Models for Correlated Data: A Review with Applications." 2001. American Journal of Political Science 45(April):470-90. The author very kindly provides data for replication on his web page: http://www.emory.edu/POLS/zorn/Data/GEE.zip. I've been comparing the Professor Zorn's results obtained with
2008 Jan 26
1
Read stata file from internet?
Dear R-helpers, I would like to have my students read into R an online Stata dataset: 'http://www.stat.ucla.edu/projects/datasets/risk_project.dta' I was able to read it into R after downloading it and converting it with StatTransfer (http://www.stattransfer.com/). Here is what happens when I use read.dta() as I would use read.table(): > require(foreign) > risk2 <-
2018 Mar 22
1
exporting data to stata
On Thu, Mar 22, 2018 at 4:52 AM, Raja, Dr. Edwin Amalraj <amalraj.raja at abdn.ac.uk> wrote: > Hi , > > library(foreign) > write.dta(data1, "data1.dta") > > should work. I don't think so: > library(foreign) > example(svydesign) > write.dta(dstrat, "~/Downloads/foo.dta") Error in write.dta(dstrat, "~/Downloads/foo.dta") : The
2018 Mar 22
0
exporting data to stata
Hi , library(foreign) write.dta(data1, "data1.dta") should work. The file will be saved in the working directory. Use getwd() to know the working directory. Best wishes Amalraj Raja -----Original Message----- From: R-help [mailto:r-help-bounces at r-project.org] On Behalf Of rosario scandurra Sent: 22 March 2018 07:47 To: r-help at r-project.org Subject: [R] exporting data to stata
2018 Mar 22
3
exporting data to stata
Hi, I am new to R and I want to export data into Stata. Could somebody help with that? Thanks a lot. This is the code I am using: > setwd("D:/datasets/Seg-bcn/ESBD") > data1 <- readRDS("r17045_ESDB_Habitatges_BDD_V_1_0.rds") > library(foreign) > write.dta(data="data1", file = "D:/datasets/data1.dta") Error in write.dta(data =
2009 May 18
1
discrepancies between stata and r for a cox regression
Hello I would like to develop the use of R. Trying R and more particulary the cox model, I am surprised by discrepancies between results with stata and R for a cox model With the same data base, I get a hazard ratio (4.82) that is not the same obtained with stata (4.52) You will find attached the file leukemia.dta I used (Stata) Here are the codes for R library(foreign)
2012 Oct 26
2
Stata Database & R
Dear All, I am given some data to analyze. The data is in the form of a Stata database (.dta file). What is the best way to import it into an R dataframe? Is there any particular caveat I should be aware of? Many thanks Lorenzo
2007 Jul 27
1
reading stata files: preserving values of variables converted to factors
Hi, I am a Stata user new to R. I am using read.dta to read a Stata file that has variables with value labels. read.dta converts them to factors, but seems to recode them with values from 1 to <number of factor levels> (looking at the output of unclass(<varname>)), so the original numerical values are lost. Using convert.factors=FALSE preserves the values, but seems to discard
2007 Jul 10
1
Help with write.foreign (exporting data to Stata)
Hi. I'm trying to export a dataframe from R into Stata to use a statistical function I have there. I attached library write.foreign and renamed my variables to get them to match Stata's required format, and now have the following error: "file /tmp/Rtmps7rmrM/file1c06dac8.raw not found" Other than typing write.foreign, do I need to do something in R to get it to save the file
2007 Jun 15
1
importing .dta files
I'm trying to read in a Stata file but I've never used this function ( read.dta). It's the only one that seems to come close to working, but I keep getting this error: > data<-read.dta("C:/Documents and Settings/Chris/Desktop/S4412/catestscores.dta") Error in read.dta("C:/Documents and Settings/Chris/Desktop/S4412/catestscores.dta", : a binary read
2017 Dec 06
3
STATA base de datos
OK. Lee primero los datos, guarda el data.frame (.RData o en un .csv o lo que quieras). Sal de RStudio o incluso reinicia el ordenador para liberar el máximo de memoria. Y comienza una nueva sesión con RStudio cargando los datos con "fread()". Por otro lado, este conjunto de datos ¿cómo es de grande (filas y columnas)?. ¿Y qué máquina tienes?. ¿Cuanta RAM tienes?. Gracias, Carlos.
2006 Mar 03
3
memory once again
Dear all, A few weeks ago, I asked this list why small Stata files became huge R files. Thomas Lumley said it was because "Stata uses single-precision floating point by default and can use 1-byte and 2-byte integers. R uses double precision floating point and four-byte integers." And it seemed I couldn't do anythig about it. Is it true? I mean, isn't there a (more or less