(Just learning? These DBMS=XLSX techniques also work in SAS University Edition.) You do need a licence for SAS/ACCESS to PC Files. Your Excel file must be in the Excel 2007-or-later format (XLSX). It works on all operating systems without the need for additional components like the PC Files Server. ![]() With SAS 9.4 and later, SAS recommends using DBMS=XLSX for the most flexibility. In this article, I'll describe how to use the RANGE statement in PROC IMPORT to get the data you need. ![]() If you're using SAS to read data from Microsoft Excel, what can you do when the data you need doesn't begin at cell A1?īy design, SAS can read data from any range of cells in your spreadsheet. However, many of us use spreadsheets as if they were databases, and then we struggle when the spreadsheet layout does not support database-style rigor of predictable rows, columns, and variable types - the basic elements we need for analytics and reporting. ![]() I've said it before: spreadsheets are not databases.
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