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RE: st: Followup: inverting a stored table of regression results - then exporting to a cvs/excel file
From
Nick Cox <[email protected]>
To
"'[email protected]'" <[email protected]>
Subject
RE: st: Followup: inverting a stored table of regression results - then exporting to a cvs/excel file
Date
Thu, 4 Nov 2010 10:37:33 +0000
I do it the other way round. -which- tells me what is an official command or whether I have a copy in some directory or folder for user-written programs. -findit- then looks for other stuff.
Nick
[email protected]
Eric Booth
Thanks, Nick. Usually when I try to check whether a package I'm using is something I downloaded from SSC or not, I (lazily) just type -ssc d foo- or -ssc install foo- and as long as it doesn't give me the error:
ssc install: "foo" not found at SSC, type -findit foo-
(To find all packages at SSC that start with t, type -ssc describe t-)
r(601);
I assume it's from the SSC.
I didn't get this error when I checked -stack- (apparently, because there is a page for it (http://ideas.repec.org/c/boc/bocode/s320501.html)), but I need to look closer in the future.
On Nov 4, 2010, at 5:23 AM, Nick Cox wrote:
> <sacrifice>
>
> Detail: -stack- is an official command of long standing.
>
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