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| The Complete Guide to the SAS Output Delivery System |
The HTML destination can produce four kinds of files: body, contents, frame, and page files. You create these files with options in the ODS HTML statement (see ODS HTML Statement for details).
| The Body File |
Note:
For graphics output, titles and footnotes are, by default,
part of the graphics file. You can use the NOGTITLE and NOGFOOTNOTE options
to place them in the body file instead. See the discussion of GTITLE and
GFOOTNOTE for more information. ![[cautend]](../common/images/cautend.gif)
All <TABLE> tags and all <IMG> tags are potential targets for links or references (see HTML Links and References). Therefore, ODS must provide an <A> tag with a NAME attribute close to each <TABLE> and <IMG> tag for links and references to point to. The NAME attribute on the anchor tag becomes the final part of any reference or link to the table. ODS inserts anchor tags in its HTML output as follows:
Placement of <A> (anchor) Tags in HTML Output
For a view of this same file through a browser, see HTML Frame File.
| The Contents File |
The contents file contains a link to the body file for each HTML table that ODS creates from procedure or DATA step results. The targets for these links are the values of the NAME attributes on the anchor tags that are in the body file (see The Body File). For example, an anchor tag that links to the second HTML table of results in Placement of <A> (anchor) Tags in HTML Output looks like this:
<A href="pop-body.htm#IDX1">In this anchor tag
You can view the contents file directly in the browser, or, if you make a frame file, you can see the contents file as part of the frame file (see The Frame File).
| The Page File |
The page file contains a link to the body file for each page of HTML output that ODS creates from procedure or DATA step results. The targets for these links are the values of the NAME attributes on the anchor tags that are in the body file (see The Body File). For example, an anchor tag that links to the second page of results in Placement of <A> (anchor) Tags in HTML Output looks like this:
<A href="pop-body.htm#IDX2">In this anchor tag
You can view the page file directly in the browser, or, if you make a frame file, you can see the page file as part of the frame file (see The Frame File).
| The Frame File |
The frame file
provides a simultaneous view of the body file and the contents file, the page
file, or both. The following figure illustrates how a frame that references
both the contents and page files looks (in part) to an ASCII editor.
Schematic of an HTML Frame File
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HTML Frame File shows the same frame file viewed from a browser.
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