Reputation: 13
When trying to merge datasets in SAS I continuously get the following error for a number of variables:
Column 115 from the first contributor of OUTER UNION is not the same type as its counterpart from the second
I've been able to get around this error usually by doing the following:
Changing one of the variables to the same "type" of the other. For example, changing variable A to a character type from a numeric type so that it matches the variable in the other dataset thereby allowing the merge to happen.
Importing the datasets that I am trying to merge together as CSV files and then adding the "guessing rows" option in the proc import step. For example:
proc import datafile='xxxxx'
out=fadados
dbms=csv replace;
getnames=yes;
guessingrows=200;
run;
However, sometimes in spite of importing my files as CSVs and using "guessingrows" I still get the above error and sometimes there are so many that it is VERY time consuming and not feasible to actually convert all variables to the same "type" so that they match between datasets.
Can anyone advise me on how I can easily AVOID this error? Is there another way that people get around this? I get this error so often that I am tired of having to convert every single variable. There must be another way!
******UPDATE***** Here is an example that everyone is asking for:
proc sql;
title 'MED REC COMBINED';
create table combined_bn_hw as
select * from bndados
outer union corr
select * from hwdados;
quit;
And here is the output I get in the log:
21019 proc sql;
21020 title 'MED REC COMBINED';
21021 create table combined_bn_hw as
21022 select * from bndados
21023 outer union corr
21024 select * from hwdados;
ERROR: Column 115 from the first contributor of OUTER UNION is not the same type as its
counterpart from the second.
ERROR: Column 120 from the first contributor of OUTER UNION is not the same type as its
counterpart from the second.
ERROR: Column 173 from the first contributor of OUTER UNION is not the same type as its
counterpart from the second.
ERROR: Numeric expression requires a numeric format.
ERROR: Column 181 from the first contributor of OUTER UNION is not the same type as its
counterpart from the second.
ERROR: Column 185 from the first contributor of OUTER UNION is not the same type as its
counterpart from the second.
ERROR: Column 186 from the first contributor of OUTER UNION is not the same type as its
counterpart from the second.
21025 quit;
NOTE: The SAS System stopped processing this step because of errors.
NOTE: PROCEDURE SQL used (Total process time):
real time 0.01 seconds
cpu time 0.00 seconds
Upvotes: 1
Views: 2958
Reputation: 51566
Don't use PROC IMPORT to guess what types of variables you have in your data. Its decision is going to depend on what values are in the file. Just write a data step to read your CSV files yourself. Then you can control how the variables are defined.
PROC IMPORT has to guess if your ID variable is numeric or character. And since it is doing based on what is in the file it can make different decisions for different sets of data. A common example is when a character variable is totally empty then PROC IMPORT will think it should be a numeric variable.
You could recall the data step code that PROC IMPORT generates and update that to use consistent data types for your variables. But writing your own is not very hard. you don't have to make as complicated a program as PROC IMPORT generates. Just include an INFILE statement, define your variables, including attaching any required INFORMATS (like for date values) and then use a simple INPUT statement.
data want;
infile 'myfile.csv' dsd firstobs=2 truncover;
length var1 $20 var2 8 ... varlast 8 ;
informat var2 yymmdd10.;
format var2 yymmdd10.;
input var1 -- varlast;
run;
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 914
Without an example it is difficult to test. Did you try the FORCE option on PROC APPEND?
Example:
proc append base=base data=one force; run;
proc append base=base data=two force; run;
proc append base=base data=e04 force; run;
Source: http://www.sascommunity.org/wiki/PROC_APPEND_Alternatives
Upvotes: 0