Hi Alex,
Thanks! I needed the path from the file I opened! For some reason I opened a
file and typed pwd and it still returned data (probably I did something
wrong)...
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Alex Ogan
Sent: 15 May 2006 22:25
To: [email protected]
Subject: st: RE: RE: RE: Quick Saving
Do you want the working directory, or the directory you opened the file
from? These are not the same thing.
The pwd command (and the c(pwd) macro) do give you the current working
directory:
. clear
. cd c:\
c:\
. display "`c(pwd)'"
c:
. pwd
c:\
. cd d:
D:\
. display "`c(pwd)'"
D:
. pwd
D:\
But maybe what you want is the path from `c(filename)'?
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Nuno Soares
Sent: Monday, May 15, 2006 5:20 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: st: RE: RE: Quick Saving
Hi Alex,
I believe pwd only gives the default working directory, not the actual
working directory. For instance, if you open a file from "c:\data\tempdata"
pwd gives you "c:\data" (if this is your default directory. What I need is a
command that retrieves the "c:\data\tempdata".
Thanks,
Nuno
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Alex Ogan
Sent: 15 May 2006 22:13
To: [email protected]
Subject: st: RE: Quick Saving
Is `c(pwd)' what you want?
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Nuno Soares
Sent: Monday, May 15, 2006 5:03 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: st: Quick Saving
Importance: High
Hi Statalisters,
I was wondering if anyone knows of a procedure that allows the user to save
the current dataset in the current working directory without typing the all
path, just the filename.
If we don't specify the path, the -save- command saves the file in the
default data directory. If we want to save in the current working directory
(different from the default directory) I believe we have to write the
complete path (which is extremely boring if we want to quick save several
versions of the file after ).
I've been trying to write a ado file that enables to do just that, but I
don't know if Stata has a command that retrieves the current directory.
The objective is to write a command like this: qksave filename.
Can anyone help?
Best,
Nuno
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