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William E. Benjamin

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Exchanging Data From SAS to Excel

Microsoft Excel remains the leading spreadsheet application on the market; nearly every SAS user will need to move their data and reports into Excel workbooks at some point during their career. Exchanging Data From SAS(R) to Excel: The ODS Excel Destination shows SAS users how to create Excel workbooks that are presentation ready, eliminating manual changes to the workbooks after creation.

While the original book Exchanging Data between SAS and Microsoft Excel: Tips and Techniques to Transfer and Manage Data More Efficiently touched upon many topics involved in moving data between SAS and Excel, this companion book delves into the options that are available with the ODS Excel destination. This book also has numerous examples that include syntax and graphical output.

With this book, you can learn how to:

Create native Excel files

Insert graphs and images into Excel files

Place multiple tables on multiple tabs within the file

Customize spreadsheets with workbook-level options, print features, column features, row features, and cell-level features

Exchanging Data from SAS® to Excel: The ODS Excel Destination will make sending your output and graphics to Excel a breeze, enhancing any presentation!

Exchanging Data between SAS and Microsoft Excel

Master simple-to-complex techniques for transporting and managing data between SAS and Excel William Benjamin's Exchanging Data between SAS and Microsoft Excel: Tips and Techniques to Transfer and Manage Data More Efficiently describes many of the options and methods that enable a SAS programmer to transport data between SAS and Excel. The book includes examples that all levels of SAS and Excel users can apply to their everyday programming tasks. Because the book makes no assumptions about the skill levels of either SAS or Excel users, it has a wide-ranging application, providing detailed instructions about how to apply the techniques shown. It contains sections that gather instructional and syntactical information together that are otherwise widely dispersed, and it provides detailed examples about how to apply the software to everyday applications. These examples enable novice users and power developers alike the chance to expand their capabilities and enhance their skillsets. By moving from simple-to-complex applications and examples, the layout of the book allows it to be used as both a training and a reference tool. Excel users and SAS programmers are presented with tools that will assist in the integration of SAS and Excel processes in order to automate reporting and programming interfaces. This enables programming staff to request their own reports or processes and, in turn, support a much larger community.