In this example, you create a one-way frequency table for the category
variable of the Hurricanes
data set. The Hurricanes
data set contains 6,188 observations of tropical cyclones in the Atlantic basin. The category
variable gives the Saffir-Simpson category of the tropical cyclone for each observation. A missing value of the category
variable means that the storm had an intensity of less than tropical depression strength (wind speeds less than 22 knots)
at the time of observation.
To create a one-way frequency table:
Select Figure 16.1.
→ → from the main menu, as shown in
The Frequency Counts dialog box appears. (See Figure 16.2.) You can select a variable for the analysis on the Variables tab.
Select the variable category
, and click .
For nominal variables, you can produce a bar chart of the categories of the chosen variable.
Click the Plots tab.
The Plots tab becomes active. (See Figure 16.3.)
Select
.Click
.
Figure 16.4 shows the results of this analysis. The analysis calls the FREQ procedure, which uses the options specified in the dialog box. The procedure displays a frequency table in the output document. The table shows the frequency and percent of each Saffir-Simpson category for these data. Hurricanes of category 3 or higher account for only 7% of the nonmissing data, whereas almost half of the observations are classified as tropical storms.
The bar chart shows a graphical view of the category
variable. You can create a graphical version of the output table by labeling the bars in the bar chart with their frequencies
or percentages. To add labels to the bar chart, do the following:
Right-click near the center of the plot area. Select
from the pop-up menu.The Plot Area Properties dialog box appears. (See Figure 16.5.) The Bars tab controls attributes of the bar chart.
Click
.Click
.Click
.
Note: You can also label the bar chart by using keyboard shortcuts. Activate the bar chart. Press the “l” key (lowercase “L”) to toggle labels. Press the “p” key to alternate between displaying frequency and percentage.
The percentages displayed on the bar chart do not match the percentages in the one-way frequency table. That is because the bar chart includes the 366 missing observations in the total number of observations, whereas the analysis does not include those observations by default. (The counts for each bar do match the counts in the table; only the percentages differ.)
To exclude missing values from the bar chart:
The bar chart now omits the missing values as shown in Figure 16.6.
Alternatively, if you want to include missing values as a valid category, then you can specify that the one-way table should include a category of missing values.
To specify options for the Frequency Counts analysis:
Click the Tables tab, as shown in Figure 16.7.
In the
list, select the option .
This option specifies that missing values should be regarded as a valid category. If you run (or rerun) the analysis with this option, the one-way table includes missing values as a valid category. The frequency table produced with this option agrees with the default bar chart.