3 products were found matching your search for Tabulate in 1 shops:
-
Proc Tabulate by Example
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 59.35 $An abundance of real-world examples highlights Lauren Haworth's PROC TABULATE by Example. Beginning and intermediate SAS users will find this step-by-step guide to producing tables and reports using the TABULATE procedure both convenient and inviting. Applications are presented in a self-contained, two-page layout; discussion material and sample code are on one page, and the resulting tables are on the facing page. Topics are presented in order of increasing complexity, making this an excellent training manual or self-tutorial. The concise format also makes this a quick reference guide for specific applications for more advanced users. A very handy section on common problems and their solutions is also included. With this book, you will quickly learn how to generate tables using macros, create tables using SAS/ASSIST software, present output on the Internet, handle percentages and missing data, modify row and column headings, and produce one-, two-, and three-dimensional tables using PROC TABULATE. Also provided are more advanced tips on complex formatting and exporting PROC TABULATE to other applications.
-
Evaluating Versions of the New Testament
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 73.53 $This book tabulates easy to use facts about the wordings of various Bible versions to enable on personally to evaluate four Greek and ten English Bible Texts.
-
Field Theory Handbook: Including Coordinate Systems, Differential Equations and Their Solutions
Vendor: Abebooks.com Price: 187.55 $Let us first state exactly what this book is and what it is not. It is a compendium of equations for the physicist and the engineer working with electrostatics, magne tostatics, electric currents, electromagnetic fields, heat flow, gravitation, diffusion, optics, or acoustics. It tabulates the properties of 40 coordinate systems, states the Laplace and Helmholtz equations in each coordinate system, and gives the separation equations and their solutions. But it is not a textbook and it does not cover relativistic and quantum phenomena. The history of classical physics may be regarded as an interplay between two ideas, the concept of action-at-a-distance and the concept of a field. Newton's equation of universal gravitation, for instance, implies action-at-a-distance. The same form of equation was employed by COULOMB to express the force between charged particles. AMPERE and GAUSS extended this idea to the phenomenological action between currents. In 1867, LUDVIG LORENZ formulated electrodynamics as retarded action-at-a-distance. At almost the same time, MAXWELL presented the alternative formulation in terms of fields. In most cases, the field approach has shown itself to be the more powerful.
3 results in 0.222 seconds
Related search terms
© Copyright 2024 shopping.eu