Note: See Range Chart (R Chart) Examples in the SAS/QC Sample Library.
In this example, the RCHART statement procedure is used to create a summary data set that can be read later by the SHEWHART
procedure (as in the preceding example). The following statements read measurements from the data set Disks
and create a summary data set named Diskhist
:
proc shewhart data=Disks; rchart Time*Lot / outhistory = Diskhist nochart; run;
The OUTHISTORY= option names the output data set, and the NOCHART option suppresses the display of the chart, which would be identical to the chart in Figure 17.70. Options such as OUTHISTORY= and NOCHART are specified after the slash (/) in the RCHART statement. A complete list of options is presented in the section Syntax: RCHART Statement.
Figure 17.73 contains a partial listing of Diskhist
.
Figure 17.73: The Summary Data Set Diskhist
Summary Data Set for Disk Times |
Lot | TimeX | TimeR | TimeN |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 8.00833 | 0.16 | 6 |
2 | 8.02167 | 0.09 | 6 |
3 | 7.97833 | 0.07 | 6 |
4 | 8.00667 | 0.10 | 6 |
5 | 8.01833 | 0.16 | 6 |
There are four variables in the data set Diskhist
.
Lot
contains the subgroup index.
TimeX
contains the subgroup means.
TimeR
contains the subgroup ranges.
TimeN
contains the subgroup sample sizes.
The subgroup mean variable is included in the OUTHISTORY= data set even though it is not required by the RCHART statement.
This enables the data set to be used as a HISTORY= data set with the BOXCHART, XCHART, and XRCHART statements, as well as
with the RCHART statement. Note that the summary statistic variables are named by adding the suffix characters X, R, and N to the process Time
specified in the RCHART statement. In other words, the variable naming convention for OUTHISTORY= data sets is the same as
that for HISTORY= data sets.
For more information, see OUTHISTORY= Data Set.