home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- The main menu area is used for travelling between menus and for
- loading and creating files. "Creating files" first requests
- information on the type of label to be used for the data. These
- labels are used only for graphing, and have no impact on the
- statistical procedures in the program. They may be initialized as
- blanks to be filled in later by you. They may simply be a counter,
- in which case you will be asked to specify the starting value and
- a rate of increment. This option would be used if you wanted to
- specify calendar years, such as 1988. You may select months as a
- label. In this case, you must enter a numeric value for the month,
- such as 1 for January, etc. The data may be specified as days of
- the week or weekdays. The difference between these two is that
- days of the week includes Saturday and Sunday, while week days
- includes only Monday to Friday. For each of these options, you
- have 13 different ways in which the date may be shown. These are
- displayed in a grid of 27 squares on the screen. Clicking the
- mouse button on one of the squares will highlight the style. A
- subsequent click will return the square to normal. Clicking on OK
- will make the choice official.
-
- This style of dialog box is used throughout B/STAT for selecting
- variables. Pressing the "F1" key will have the same effect as
- pressing OK. Pressing the "F2" key will cancel the operation, and
- the default or previous labels will remain. In other procedures
- "F2" will also act as a cancel button. After selecting the style,
- you must specify the date information about the starting day for
- the data. These values must be specified numerically. The week is
- assumed to start on Monday, so 1 is Monday and 7 is Sunday. If you
- enter an impossible month, such as month 23, the program will take
- the modulus of 12 and this number to generate the starting month.
- Similar actions occur for the day and the day of the week. Years
- may be entered as 1988 or as simply 88. Any number below 100 is
- treated as 1900+ the number; any negative numbers are converted to
- positives, so, unfortunately, years such as 34 B.C. will have to
- be typed as manual labels.
-
- Once the type of label is entered, you will move to the
- spreadsheet style data entry screen. This screen allows for 26
- columns of data, and as many rows as you initialized in the
- program. The minimum number of data rows is 19. B/STAT is not a
- spreadsheet. This screen is simply for data entry, although some
- facility for variable creation does exist. The spreadsheet uses
- both drop-down menus and commands for operation. For rapid
- movement around the spreadsheet the ">" command is used. >s45 will
- move the cursor to column "S" and row 45 automatically. As well,
- there are commands for sorting columns, adding them together, etc.
- The command list is available by selecting the help menu from the
- data entry screen. For missing data, enter NA as the value.
-
- The normal view of the columns in the spreadsheet is as separate
- data variables. There are statistical procedures in B/STAT,
- however, which treat the entire collection of data as a matrix of
- data. These procedures are discussed more fully in the manual and
- in the individual help screens.
-
- B/STAT can save and load different data formats.
-
- -"Save" and "load" do so in B/STAT's format.
-
- -"DIF load" and "DIF save" do so in the data interchange format
- introduced by VISICALC many years ago and currently supported by
- most programs. B/STAT will ask you if you want to load the data by
- column or row. Strictly speaking, the question is misleading. In
- the original DIF standard you could save the data by row or by
- column. Many programs today give you no such choice, so you cannot
- tell whether the variables were saved as rows or columns.
- Similarily, B/STAT cannot tell whether the data represents 12
- variables with 20 points each, or 20 variables with 12 points
- each. We suggest that you load data by column and then check to
- see if you got what you wanted. If not then simply type "FLIP".
- The program will switch the rows and the columns. Note that B/STAT
- can accept only numeric data in a DIF file.
-
- -An ASCII file refers to a file in which each record is a number.
- To be used by B/STAT the data must be in the following order:
- #rows used;
- #columns used;
- data value for col 1 row 1;
- data value for col 2 row 1;
- data value for col 3 row 1;
- etc.
-
- -PRN files are created by many spreadsheet programs. These are
- actual disk images of pages which would otherwise have been
- printed. Only numerics are allowed in B/STAT. The data must have
- been saved in such a way that the columns represent data
- variables.
-
- -WKS files are produced by products such as LOTUS 123. They may
- also be labelled as WK1 files. To load these you must specify a
- range from the spreadsheet. This range will be stated as A23-F47
- for example. Only numeric data will be accepted. If you already
- have data in B/STAT, you will be asked if you want to replace the
- existing data or to augment it by creating new variables for the
- new data.
-
- -SYLK files are created by multiplan. In all respects the dialogs
- are the same as for WKS files.
- Editing a file simply places you in the spreadsheet data editor
- without destroying the existing data. This allows for adding or
- changing data.
-
- The help drive selection allows you to change the drive path for
- finding the help files. When you start the program, the drive
- searched for the files is the one from which the program was
- started.
- The "Print to disk" option is an "on/off" toggle. When high
- lighted all statistical tests will print to a disk file called
- "BSTATPRN.DOC" rather than the printer. If the file already exists
- the data will be appended to the file.
-
- The "Tables" selections load in standard statistics tables so that
- you can check values against them. Not all possible tables are
- present. Tables are not used for tests where B/STAT is able to
- calculate the probability by direct mathematical means.
-
- Coach poses a series of questions. Your answers to these will
- enable the program to suggest statistical procedures. Not all
- processes available in B/STAT are referenced by "Coach". For
- example, time series studies are not suggested. This is because
- coach was designed for a different class of problem than is
- addressed by time series. As well, some of the procedures in
- B/STAT are not, in and of themselves, statistical procedures.
- Interpolation, fourier smoothing, etc., are not really statistical
- in nature but simply mathematical. To use "Coach", you must have
- some knowledge about your data and of terms used. The tutorial
- should give these to you. The first question asks about the number
- of variables measured for the experimental units. If, for example,
- you are studying data on cars and you measure the price of each
- car, then you have measured 1 variable. If you measure gas mileage
- and acceleration as well, then you have measured 3 variables. If
- you want to measure the influence of acceleration and gas mileage
- on price, then price would be considered the dependent, or
- criterion variable, and acceleration and gas mileage are the
- independent variables. If you don't want to assume a dependency
- relationship, then there would be no dependent or criterion
- variable. In such a case, you would only be looking for
- relationships among the variables. The succeeding questions will
- deal with the nature of the variables themselves, to determine
- whether they are nominally, ordinally, or intervally scaled, and
- whether they are related or not. At the end of the questions (3 or
- 4 generally), the program will return a suggested procedure. In
- some cases, there is none. Remember that one can consider
- intervally scaled data to be ordinally scaled, and you may wish to
- do so for some types of analysis. Similarily you can restate
- ordinal data as nominal on occasion.
-
-