As expected, that version works great. Thanks!
-Alan
On 2/3/2022 2:25 AM, Friedrich Beckmann wrote:
Hi Alan,
the discussion regarding this crosstabs / pivot problem was here:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/bug-gnu-pspp/2022-01/msg00017.html
The daily version 1.5.3-g797d4c from here:
https://caeis.etech.fh-augsburg.de/downloads/windows/1.5.3-g797d4c/
should include Ben's fix. I have copied the nightly build from today to that
place. The website
https://www.gnu.org/software/pspp/get.htm
currently recommends version 1.5.3-g8d023f which contains the bug. Maybe
somebody
could test the windows 1.5.3-g797d4c version and then we can change the
recommended
version as there have now been two reports about this bug.
Regards
Fritz
Am 03.02.2022 um 04:38 schrieb Alan Mead <am...@alanmead.org>:
1.5.3-g8d023f is the latest Windows version from
https://www.gnu.org/software/pspp/get.html
-Alan
On 2/2/2022 9:04 PM, Ben Pfaff wrote:
I fixed that bug a few weeks ago. If there's no published Windows build with
the fix, then it needs to get updated.
On Wed, Feb 2, 2022, 7:01 PM Alan Mead <am...@alanmead.org> wrote:
What error did you get? Can you copy the exact error message into a reply?
Or are you reporting an incorrect result? If so, please tell us more about what
you did and how the result was wrong.
Also, please click Help -> About and tell us the version number and what kind
of Windows computer (Windows 10?) you are using.
I just tried used a CROSSTABS in GNU pspp 1.5.3-g8d023f and I got the error
below. That seems like a bug. When I pasted the syntax and deleted the PIVOT
keyword and ran it, it seemed to produce correct output. It looks like PIVOT
controls the format of the output.
-Alan
CROSSTABS
/TABLES= caution_score agree_score BY consistency
3.31-3.35: error: CROSSTABS: Syntax error at `PIVOT'.
/FORMAT=AVALUE TABLES PIVOT
/STATISTICS=CHISQ
/CELLS=COUNT ROW COLUMN TOTAL.
On 2/2/2022 1:57 AM, Sreejesh P Govindankutty wrote:
Dear sir,
I installed PSPP in my windows system, but when i doing cross tab showing
error. how I get a help to solve this issue
thank you,
Sreejesh
--
Alan D. Mead, Ph.D.
President, Talent Algorithms Inc.
science + technology = better workers
https://talalg.com
Acton's dictate: Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts
absolutely. Great men are almost always bad men, even when they exercise
influence and not authority.
--
Alan D. Mead, Ph.D.
President, Talent Algorithms Inc.
science + technology = better workers
https://talalg.com
Acton's dictate: Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts
absolutely. Great men are almost always bad men, even when they exercise
influence and not authority.
--
Alan D. Mead, Ph.D.
President, Talent Algorithms Inc.
science + technology = better workers
https://talalg.com
Acton's dictate: Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts
absolutely. Great men are almost always bad men, even when they exercise
influence and not authority.