Understanding the SAS/IML Language |
A matrix is the fundamental structure in the SAS/IML language. A matrix is a two-dimensional array of numeric or character values. Matrices are useful for working with data and have the following properties:
Matrices can be either numeric or character. Elements of a numeric matrix are double-precision values. Elements of a character matrix are character strings of equal length.
The name of a matrix must be a valid SAS name.
Matrices have dimensions defined by the number of rows and columns.
Matrices can contain elements that have missing values (see the section Missing Values).
The dimensions of a matrix are defined by the number of rows and columns. An matrix has elements arranged in rows and columns. The following nomenclature is standard in this book:
matrices are called scalars.
matrices are called row vectors.
matrices are called column vectors.
The type of a matrix is "numeric" if its elements are numbers; the type is "character" if its elements are character strings. A matrix that has not been assigned values has an "undefined" type.
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