if you plan to use Stata for more than one analysis you better get -estout-
or you use the -estimates- commands (ready build in). --outreg- is also a
nice tool but as others already wrote in this list, it is no longer
developed and there are some weird things happening when using it with
later stata-versions. Another possibility is to mark the table you want to
copy, then a right click and "copy table". Best way then is to paste it
into a excel sheet or an already formatted word table.
At 18:25 27.05.2005, you wrote:
>At 06:17 PM 5/27/2005 +0200, Stefanie Brodmann wrote:
>>If you use the font "Courier New" in Word, then at least the output has a
>>better shape than when using "Times New Roman".
>>
>>Stefanie
>
>For my class handouts I routinely cut and paste using Courier New 9 pt or
>10 pt font. I also use the "keep with next" formatting feature to avoid
>awkward page breaks. You can, of course, come up with fancier looking
>output, but part of the purpose of my handouts is to show how to get Stata
>to do things and how to interpret the printout.
>
>
>-------------------------------------------
>Richard Williams, Notre Dame Dept of Sociology
>OFFICE: (574)631-6668, (574)631-6463
>FAX: (574)288-4373
>HOME: (574)289-5227
>EMAIL: [email protected]
>WWW (personal): http://www.nd.edu/~rwilliam
>WWW (department): http://www.nd.edu/~soc
>
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>* http://www.ats.ucla.edu/stat/stata/
>
*
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