The hardware and bandwidth for this mirror is donated by dogado GmbH, the Webhosting and Full Service-Cloud Provider. Check out our Wordpress Tutorial.
If you wish to report a bug, or if you are interested in having us mirror your free-software or open-source project, please feel free to contact us at mirror[@]dogado.de.

Making an .sps file

Jacob Kaplan

2024-08-16

Most times you will deal with a .dat+.sps file pair, you will be given the .sps file already made. However, in rare cases - such as working with FBI data - you need to make you own based on a PDF guide provided.

The function make_sps_setup makes that a bit easier by doing all the formatting needed, meaning you just need to provide the info for each section. It will create a .sps setup file and save it in your working directory.

There are two parameters absolutely needed - file_name and col_positions - as well as four optional parameters.

file_name

file_name is simply the string of the name you want the file to be saved as, such as “setup_file_example”. Including the “.sps” to the end is not required.

col_positions

This is a vector either of strings indicating the width of each column (starting at 1) or the starting and ending point of that column with a “-” between the start and end number.

col_positions <- c("1-1", "2-3", "4-5", "6-11")

col_names

This is a vector of strings with names for the column. Only useful if the guide you’re following to make this .sps file includes these names and you want to be exact. If you don’t include this, it will just name the columns V1:Vnumber_of_columns.

col_names <- c("var1", "var2", "var3", "var4")

col_labels

This is the same as col_names but each column name should be the descriptive name of the column. These names are the ones that will be used if real_names = TRUE in read_ascii_setup.

col_labels <- c("version_number", "victim_sex", "victim_race", "state")

value_labels

This is a named vector with the column name as its own string followed by a string for each value-label pair in that column. The syntax is ‘value = label’. For the column name, the label is blank so it appears ‘column =’. For example, if ‘sex’ is the column name as it has value labels for M = Male and F = Female, the value_labels parameter will be:

value_labels = c(“sex =”, “M = Male”, “F = Female”)

value_labels <- c("victim_sex = ",
                  "MA = male",
                  "FE = female",
                  "UN = unknown",
                  "victim_race = ",
                  "WH = white",
                  "BL = black",
                  "IA = american indian or alaskan native",
                  "AS = asian",
                  "UN = unknown")

missing_values

This is a vector of strings with the column name (can be either the name in col_names or col_labels but must be consistent) followed by all the values that represent missing values, each in its own string.

missing_values <- c("victim_sex", 
                    "-9", 
                    "-8", 
                    "victim_race",
                    "-8")

Putting it all together

asciiSetupReader::make_sps_setup(file_name = "setup_file_example",
                                 col_positions  = col_positions,
                                 col_names      = col_names,
                                 col_labels     = col_labels,
                                 value_labels   = value_labels,
                                 missing_values = missing_values)

These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.
Health stats visible at Monitor.