A familiar adage in firefighting--if you can predict it, you can prevent it--rings true in many circles of accident prevention, including software development. If you can predict that a fire, however unlikely, someday might rage through a structure, it's prudent to install smoke detectors to facilitate its rapid discovery. Moreover, the combination of smoke detectors, fire alarms, sprinklers, fire-retardant building materials, and rapid intervention might not prevent a fire from starting, but it can prevent the fire from spreading and facilitate its immediate and sometimes automatic extinguishment. Thus, as fire codes have grown to incorporate increasingly more restrictions and regulations, and as fire suppression gear, tools, and tactics have continued to advance, even the harrowing business of firefighting has become more reliable, efficient, and predictable. As operational SAS® data processes mature over time, they too should evolve to detect, respond to, and overcome dynamic environmental challenges. Erroneous data, invalid user input, disparate operating systems, network failures, memory errors, and other challenges can surprise users and cripple critical infrastructure. Exception handling describes both the identification of and response to adverse, unexpected, or untimely events that can cause process or program failure, as well as anticipated events or environmental attributes that must be handled dynamically through prescribed, predetermined channels. Rapid suppression and automatic return to functioning is the hopeful end state but, when catastrophic events do occur, exception handling routines can terminate a process or program gracefully while providing meaningful execution and environmental metrics to developers both for remediation and future model refinement. This presentation introduces fault-tolerant Base SAS® exception handling routines that facilitate robust, reliable, and responsible software design.
Troy Hughes, Datmesis Analytics
Managing and organizing external files and directories play an important part in our data analysis and business analytics work. A good file management system can streamline project management and file organizations and significantly improve work efficiency . Therefore, under many circumstances, it is necessary to automate and standardize the file management processes through SAS® programming. Compared with managing SAS files via PROC DATASETS, managing external files is a much more challenging task, which requires advanced programming skills. This paper presents and discusses various methods and approaches to managing external files with SAS programming. The illustrated methods and skills can have important applications in a wide variety of analytic work fields.
Justin Jia, Trans Union
Amanda Lin, CIBC