SAS Language Reference: Dictionary |
A word
or token in the SAS language is a collection of characters that communicates
a meaning to SAS and is not divisible into smaller units capable of independent
use. It can contain a maximum of 32,767 characters.
A word or token ends when SAS encounters one of the
following:
- the beginning of a new token
- a blank after a name or a number
token
- the ending quotation mark of a literal token.
Each word or token in the SAS language belongs
to one
of four categories:
- names
- literals
- numbers
- special
characters.
There are four basic
types of words or tokens:
-
name
- is a series of characters that begin with
a letter or an underscore. Later characters can include letters, underscores,
and numeric digits. A name token can contain up to 32,767 characters. In most
contexts, however, SAS names are limited to a shorter maximum length, such
as 32 or 8 characters. See Maximum Length of User-Supplied SAS Names.
Examples of name tokens include:
-
data
-
_new
-
yearcutoff
-
year_99
-
descending
-
_n_
-
literal
- consists of 1 to 32,767 characters enclosed
in single or double quotation marks. Examples of literals include
Note: The surrounding quotation marks
identify the token as a literal, but SAS does not store these marks as part
of the literal token.
-
number
- in general is composed entirely of numeric
digits, with an optional decimal point and a leading plus or minus sign. SAS
also recognizes numeric values in the folllowing forms as number tokens: scientific (E-) notation,
hexadecimal notation, missing value symbols, and date and time literals. Examples
of number tokens include
-
5683
-
2.35
-
0b0x
-
-5
-
5.4E-1
-
'24aug90'd
-
special character
- is usually any single keyboard character
other than letters, numbers, the underscore, and the blank. In general, each
special character is a single token, although some two-character operators,
such as ** and <=, form single tokens. The blank can end a name or a number
token, but it is not a token. Examples of special-character tokens include
|
Placement and Spacing of Words in SAS Statements |
Spacing Requirements
- You can begin SAS statements in any column of
a line and write several statements on the same line.
- You can begin a statement on one line and continue
it on another line, but you cannot split a word between two lines.
- A blank is not treated as a character in a SAS
statement unless it is enclosed in quotation marks as a literal or part of
a literal. Therefore, you can put multiple blanks any place in a SAS statement
where you can put a single blank, with no effect on the syntax.
- The rules for recognizing the boundaries of words
or tokens determine the use of spacing between them in SAS programs. If SAS
can determine the beginning of each token due to cues such as operators, you
do not need to include blanks. If SAS cannot determine the beginning of each
token, you must use blanks. See
Examples.
Although SAS does not have rigid spacing requirements,
SAS programs are easier to read and maintain if you consistently indent statements.
The examples in this book illustrate useful spacing conventions.
- In this statement, blanks are not required because SAS can determine
the boundary of every token by examining
the beginning of the next token:
total=x+y;
The first special-character token, the equal sign, marks
the end of the name token total
. The plus sign,
another special-character token, marks the end of the name token x
. The last special-character token, the semicolon, marks
the end of the y
token. Though blanks are not
needed to end any tokens in this example, you may add them for readability,
as shown here:
total = x + y;
- This statement requires blanks because
SAS cannot recognize the individual tokens without them:
input group 15 room 20;
Without blanks, the entire statement up to the semicolon
fits the rules for a name token: it begins with a letter or underscore, contains
letters, digits, or underscores thereafter, and is less than 32,767 characters
long. Therefore, this statement requires blanks to distinguish individual
name and number tokens.
Copyright 1999 by SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA. All rights reserved.