Maybe you need to use the Select All menu entry first ?
-ftr On 25/08/2016 07:23, John Darrington wrote:
The easiest way I know of to get a list of variable in the current dataset, is DISPLAY VARIABLES. If you want this information in a text file, then from the output view window choose File|Export... and use .txt as your filename suffix. J' On Wed, Aug 24, 2016 at 07:48:07AM -0500, Stacy Hardin wrote: It creates the text file, but there is nothing in the file when I open it.In my .sps file, the "export" command and the "print" command creates theblank text file. I've copied in the section below. There is more code above this section, but I don't think it's relative to this problem. The output viewer does not show any errors. The "write outfile" command works. It produces the .dat file with data in it.************************************** BEGIN DATA FILE SAVE**********************************************MATCH FILES FILE=*/KEEP resp_num TO q19.e. EXECUTE.WRITE OUTFILE='O:\2016 Jobs\305616\tabulation\305616.dat'TABLE /ALL. EXECUTE.EXPORT OUTFILE='O:\2016 Jobs\305616\tabulation\305616layout.txt'/TYPE=TXT EXECUTE.**PRINT OUTFILE='O:\2016 Jobs\305616\tabulation\305616layout.txt'TABLE /ALL. **EXECUTE.**************************************** END DATA FILE SAVE***********************************************_______________________________________________ Pspp-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/pspp-users
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