© Philip Mason 2020
P. MasonSAS Stored Processeshttps://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4842-5925-2_1

1. Introduction

Philip Mason1 
(1)
Wallingford, UK
 

SAS has been utilized by programmers for more than four decades. To keep up with the ability to retrieve, edit, modify, and report on nearly any type of data from anywhere, SAS has built SAS Stored Processes. Although you can find information about Stored Processes in the SAS documentation on the SAS site, this book focuses on helping programmers utilize the SAS Stored Process Web Application to create amazing tools for your end users.

Background

When I started using SAS in 1985 on IBM mainframes, I was using SAS 82.5 – in the days before SAS started renumbering its products into the series we know today. We ...

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