last day (16 days later) » 

16:51
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Q: Run parallel program from SAS EG using %macro

FrankichI have some problem to find out if what I want to do is possible or not on SAS EG 7.15. Context We have splitted a quite big project into several flow process which have each one a program to define a %macro statement and a final process flow which contain a program call "EXECUTION" to call all...

Instead of manually copying the macro code, why don't you put all of the definitions in one file and just use the %include statement with the autoexec feature?
Because if we change a part of any program, we would have to change 2 file, which it will be quite long. Even more in a 5000+ lines file.it would works, but the Autoexec feature would be exactly the same at the end
Not sure I understand. If you change something in the macros, you will change just the definition file. If you change something in the execute script, you will just change that script. Why would a change have to be done in 2 files ?
Then maybe I do not understand what you are trying to say. If we keep our way of split, can we just auto export a standalone file *.sas and then %include to have just one of every program ? Otherwise it is not a solution since we have to change 2 files.
Ok I do understand what you are saying. but it means to have a single file for a big amount of definition of %macro which it will be a nightmare to maintain
You could put each macro in its own file and then use include them within a main include file. One way or the other you have to maintain those macro files anyway :)
16:51
Well if I correctly understand what you are saying, then it would be really easy, but maybe I missunderstand how works %include when I looked into. Don't I have to export every program from a project to be able to use it ?
Moving this to a chat
%include is a simple thing
if you have a file say x.sas which has:
%macro macro1;
<code>
/%mend;
then in another file if you say %include "x.sas", it essentially replaces that line with contents within x.sas during compile time
Well if I correctly understand what you are saying, then it would be really easy, but maybe I missunderstand how works %include when I looked into. Don't I have to export every program from a project to be able to use it ?
Well from Chris Hemedinger If your programs are simply embedded in the SAS Enterprise Guide project (and not saved as separate files), then you cannot programmatically reference them from other program nodes in the project. so i think I can't actually. source :communities.sas.com/t5/SAS-Enterprise-Guide/…
from my last comment
you are not embedding in the project
I am
you are embedding them within the script that you are invoking
that is what %include does
that statement goes in the script that that will get executed
so the contents will automatically be imported when the script is run
16:55
but it means that I export every single program out of the .egp project
think about it like this
if you want a macro definition to be available to a script during runtime, it has to be made available to that script
but %include, you are jsut doing it - there is really no 'manual export' per se
So much work to have a single project to destroy everything only for parallel process
it is just literally getting included as part of that script
16:56
I don't think It's worth
I probably don't udnerstand what you are trying to do
because include is a very simple concept
Well yes but you have to have .sas
not a program in a flow process
Can we share a capture here ?
screenshot*
you can I think
And I do understand the concept of include
I'm just quite sure you can't if all program are in a single project
unfortunately I got to run - there are good number of experts here who I am sure will help you figure out a solution
16:59
ok
no problem i have to too
Thank you anyway for your time
and hope it's not That easy and include does not work or it's a shame for me :p
I will look into it for sure
 
5 hours later…
22:28
Instead of having the code live inside of the project, export the code to a file. Then add the file back into the project. That way the code exists in a single file outside of the .egp project file and you can reference it with a %include. Modifications to the file made from within EG are still made to the file.

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