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Making tables of estimation results is easier than ever before with the new etable command.
Create tables for single or multiple models, include marginal predictions, customize your tables using the collect commands, and export your tables to most document formats.
See it work »
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Ready to take your first steps with Stata? Alan Acock's
easy-to-follow text walks you through everything you need to
get started—from creating and cleaning datasets to producing
graphs and fitting regression models.
The revised sixth edition is fully up to date for Stata 17.
Order your copy »
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Now is your chance to be on the program!
Share your work with fellow Stata users, statisticians, and research professionals of all disciplines at the 2023 Stata Conference on 20–21 July in Stanford, California.
Submit your abstract »
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Join us on 23 February for the Stata Biostatistics and Epidemiology Virtual Symposium, where researchers in biostatistics and epidemiology from around the world will discuss current theory and applied methods using Stata.
Seats are limited. View the program and register now.
Register now »
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Are you interested in analyzing population and housing data?
With the community-contributed getcensus package, you can
easily access data from the American Community Survey. Import
a complete table, or perhaps a set of variables related
to a keyword of interest, into Stata, and you will be ready to
start your analysis.
Try it yourself »
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New to Stata?
Want to perform Bayesian analysis in Stata?
Interested in structural equation modeling?
Enroll in one of our upcoming trainings.
Learn to use Stata. Or learn a
new way to analyze data using Stata.
See current offerings »
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