Search found 5 matches

by ech447
Thu Jul 29, 2010 7:21 am
Forum: Data Manipulation
Topic: Is there an @elem() commmand for panel data?
Replies: 6
Views: 7074

Re: Is there an @elem() commmand for panel data?

Thanks. In terms of future EViews development, it would be useful to have such a command. Not infrequently we want to use indexes formed by, say, taking PX/@elem(PX,2002) for a standard time series. For panel data, I switch to a spreadsheet program for my computations. It would be nice to be able to...
by ech447
Wed Jul 28, 2010 10:09 am
Forum: Data Manipulation
Topic: Is there an @elem() commmand for panel data?
Replies: 6
Views: 7074

Is there an @elem() commmand for panel data?

Is there an @elem() commmand for panel data? Something like @elem(PX, * - 2006) that would return the 2006 value of PX for the UK when the computations were for the UK (one of the panel cross-sections) but use the 2006 value of PX for Spain (another) when the computations are for Spain? I use EViews...
by ech447
Wed Jul 14, 2010 2:54 pm
Forum: Data Manipulation
Topic: Dealing with thirteen periods per year
Replies: 6
Views: 5665

Re: Dealing with thirteen periods per year

Thanks.
by ech447
Wed Jul 14, 2010 12:05 pm
Forum: Data Manipulation
Topic: Dealing with thirteen periods per year
Replies: 6
Views: 5665

Re: Dealing with thirteen periods per year

Thanks.
The line graphs are sequences of dots instead of line graphs. I will play with that and see if there is a "connect the dots" command that works for irregular data. (I forgot to mention my version in my question--EViews 7.1 updated as of yesterday.)
Thanks again.
by ech447
Tue Jul 13, 2010 3:56 pm
Forum: Data Manipulation
Topic: Dealing with thirteen periods per year
Replies: 6
Views: 5665

Dealing with thirteen periods per year

I am a long-standing user of EViews. I am now dealing with a data set that has thirteen periods per year. Nothing exotic; that's just how the data was collected. Thus far, I have treated it as an irregular time series, so EViews deals with it as having just thirteen days per year. This doesn't seem ...

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