StataTutorial: Difference between revisions
From Santa Fe Institute Events Wiki
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{CSSS 2007 Santa Fe}} | {{CSSS 2007 Santa Fe}} | ||
If anyone is interested, I can offer a [http://www.stata.com/ Stata] tutorial. This will probably be of interest to fellow social scientists. I will cover the basics (directory structure, built-in datasets, reading and writing datasets, memory management, log files, logical operators, by-groups, subscripting, data validation & assertions, data merging, installing packages), more advanced stuff (macros, command syntax & programming, loops, debugging, temporarily destroying data, temporary variables, do and ado files, scalars & matrices, return lists, capture & quietly, version control, the Mata programming language), and if time permits I will give an overview of basic econometric commands including how Stata handles | If anyone is interested, I can offer a [http://www.stata.com/ Stata] tutorial. This will probably be of interest to the fellow social scientists. I will cover the basics (directory structure, built-in datasets, reading and writing datasets, memory management, log files, logical operators, by-groups, subscripting, data validation & assertions, data merging, installing packages), more advanced stuff (macros, command syntax & programming, loops, debugging, temporarily destroying data, temporary variables, do and ado files, scalars & matrices, return lists, capture & quietly, version control, the Mata programming language), and if time permits I will give an overview of basic econometric commands including how Stata handles time series operators. E-mail me at rafal.raciborski @ emory.edu or sign in below if you're interested. |
Latest revision as of 04:16, 12 June 2007
CSSS Santa Fe 2007 |
If anyone is interested, I can offer a Stata tutorial. This will probably be of interest to the fellow social scientists. I will cover the basics (directory structure, built-in datasets, reading and writing datasets, memory management, log files, logical operators, by-groups, subscripting, data validation & assertions, data merging, installing packages), more advanced stuff (macros, command syntax & programming, loops, debugging, temporarily destroying data, temporary variables, do and ado files, scalars & matrices, return lists, capture & quietly, version control, the Mata programming language), and if time permits I will give an overview of basic econometric commands including how Stata handles time series operators. E-mail me at rafal.raciborski @ emory.edu or sign in below if you're interested.