7

I am trying to amend the macro below to accept a macro parameter as the 'location' argument for a dir command. However I cannot get it to resolve correctly due to the nested quotes issue. Using %str(%') does not work, neither do quoting functions for some reason.

The macro will work fine when the filepath has no spaces (eg C:\temp\withnospace) as the middle quotes aren't needed. However I need this macro to work for filepaths with spaces (eg 'C:\temp\with space\').

Please help!

%macro get_filenames(location)
   filename pipedir pipe   "dir &location. /b " lrecl=32767;
   data filenames;
     infile pipedir truncover;
     input line $char1000.;
   run;
%mend;

%get_filenames(C:\temp\)              /* works */
%get_filenames('C:\temp\with space')  /* doesnt work */

8 Answers 8

14

Here's another way of achieving the same result without needing to use a PIPE.

%macro get_filenames(location);
filename _dir_ "%bquote(&location.)";
data filenames(keep=memname);
  handle=dopen( '_dir_' );
  if handle > 0 then do;
    count=dnum(handle);
    do i=1 to count;
      memname=dread(handle,i);
      output filenames;
    end;
  end;
  rc=dclose(handle);
run;
filename _dir_ clear;
%mend;

%get_filenames(C:\temp\);           
%get_filenames(C:\temp\with space);
%get_filenames(%bquote(C:\temp\with'singlequote));
1
  • although this doesn't actually answer the question, this code is far superior as it can be used across environments - and fulfills the same purpose. thankyou...
    – Allan Bowe
    Sep 14, 2009 at 8:08
6

Make the following several changes and your code will work.

%macro get_filenames(location);  %*--(1)--*;
   filename pipedir pipe "dir ""%unquote(&location)"" /b" lrecl=32767; %*--(2)--*;
   data filenames;
     infile pipedir truncover;
     input filename $char1000.;
     put filename=;
   run;
   filename pipedir clear;  %*--(3)--*;
%mend;

%get_filenames(d:\)          
%get_filenames(d:\your dir)  %*--(4)--*;

(1) End the %macro statement with a semi-colon;

(2) Surround the macro variable resolution with doubled-up double quotes and %unquote;

(3) Release the file handle by clearing it; and

(4) Don't single quote your input parameter. macro quote instead, if necessary.

2
  • this works - but leaves an error message (WARNING: No logical assign for filename PIPE.)
    – Allan Bowe
    Sep 14, 2009 at 8:12
  • 2
    just change filename pipe clear; to filename pipedir clear; to suppress the warning.
    – cmjohns
    Sep 14, 2009 at 12:54
3

Based on the last sample on this page, instead of the filename statement, try

%let filrf=pipedir;
%let rc=%sysfunc(filename(filrf,%bquote(dir "&location" /b),pipe));

and call the macro without using quotes:

%get_filenames(c:\temp\with spaces);

I also tried macro quoting, but couldn't get it to work.

1
  • +1 - nice. You can also pass lrecl as a host option to this so it is just like his original: %let rc=%sysfunc(filename(filrf,%bquote(dir "&location" /b),pipe, lrecl=32767));
    – cmjohns
    Sep 11, 2009 at 14:07
3

here's a quick macro to pull windows-based directory listings into a sas data set.

%macro DirList(dir);

/* %if &SUBDIR eq %then %let subdir=/s; */        /*** &SUBDIR not defined ****/
filename dirpipe pipe "dir &DIR.\*.* /s /-c";

data dir_list(label="Directory Listing [&DIR.]" drop=re_: _line_ date time);
  format Path
         File   $250.
         ModDT  datetime19.
         Size   16.
         _line_ $32000. ;

  if _N_ = 1 then do;
    re_path=prxparse("/Directory of (.+)/");
    re_subd=prxparse("/(\d\d\/\d\d\/\d\d\d\d)\s+(\d\d:\d\d [A|P]M)\s+\s+(\S.*)/");
    re_file=prxparse("/(\d\d\/\d\d\/\d\d\d\d)\s+(\d\d:\d\d [A|P]M)\s+(\d+)\s+(\S.*)/");
    retain re_: path;
    end;

  infile dirpipe lrecl=32000; input; _line_ = _infile_;

  if lengthn(_line_)=0 then delete;
  else
  if prxmatch(re_path, _line_) then do;
    path=prxposn(re_path, 1, _line_);
    end;
  else
  if prxmatch(re_subd, _line_) then do;
    date=input(prxposn(re_subd, 1, _line_), mmddyy10.);
    time=input(prxposn(re_subd, 2, _line_), time6.);
    ModDT=dhms(date, 0, 0, time);
    File=prxposn(re_subd, 3, _line_);
    size = .D; /*mark subdirectory records*/
    if file not in ('.', '..') then output;
    end;
  else
  if prxmatch(re_file, _line_) then do;
    date=input(prxposn(re_file, 1, _line_), mmddyy10.);
    time=input(prxposn(re_file, 2, _line_), time6.);
    ModDT=dhms(date, 0, 0, time);
    size=input(prxposn(re_file, 3, _line_), 16.);
    file=prxposn(re_file, 4, _line_);
    output;
    end;
run;
filename dirpipe clear;
%mend;

and here's how they get called

%dirlist(c:);
%dirlist(c:\temp);

notice there is no trailing backslash when specifying the base directory. C: not C:\.

2
  • I like this but I had to make a couple of changes for it to work on my system (win xp). I changed the re_subd= line to re_subd=prxparse("/(\d\d\/\d\d\/\d\d\d\d)\s+(\d\d:\d\d [A|P]M)\s+<DIR>\s+(\S.*)/"); as every line was otherwise being treated as a subdir for me. Also, I removed the %if &SUBDIR eq %then %let subdir=/s; line since &subdir macro variable isn't defined and isn't used elsewhere.
    – cmjohns
    Sep 14, 2009 at 21:09
  • i recall having to make the change to re_subd regex pattern when os was upgraded, but never thought to save the prior version. the SUBDIR parameter is intended to be for specifying the /s switch for recursive subdriectory listings. someday.
    – rkoopmann
    Sep 15, 2009 at 13:04
2

it works for me if i call the original macro this way

%get_filenames(""C:\Program Files"")

of course i had to add the semicolon at the end of the %macro statement.

if your directory contains a comma, bad things happen. to fix, use the %str() macro

 %get_filenames(%str(C:\temp\comma, fail)) 

0
2

Here's a pure macro code version. It also allows you to specify that you only want to know about files (and not folders) and lets you specify a basic filter. It returns the list of files in a delimited format but you can easily insert these into a dataset using SQL insert if you wanted to (example included but not tested - no SAS access atm). It can be called from anywhere - within another macro, a dataset, an sql statement... wherever. Just add these two macros to your macro autocall library and you're right to go.

There are 2 macros below. The %isdir macro is required by the %file_list macro. The macros are a bit larger and more complex than the above but they are MUCH more flexible. Plus they provide error checking.

/******************************************************************************
** PROGRAM:  ISDIR.SAS
**
** DESCRIPTION: DETERMINES IF THE SPECIFIED PATH EXISTS OR NOT.
**              RETURNS: 0 IF THE PATH DOES NOT EXIST OR COULD NOT BE OPENED.
**                       1 IF THE PATH EXISTS AND CAN BE OPENED.
**
** PARAMETERS: iPath: THE FULL PATH TO EXAMINE.  NOTE THAT / AND \ ARE TREATED
**                    THE SAME SO &SASDIR/COMMON/MACROS IS THE SAME AS
**                    &SASDIR\COMMON\MACROS.
**
******************************************************************************/

%macro isDir(iPath=,iQuiet=1);
  %local result dname;

  %let result = 0;

  %if %sysfunc(filename(dname,&iPath)) eq 0 %then %do;
    %if %sysfunc(dopen(&dname)) %then %do;
      %let result = 1;
    %end;
    %else %if not &iQuiet %then %do;
      %put ERROR: ISDIR: %sysfunc(sysmsg());
    %end;
  %end;
  %else %if not &iQuiet %then %do;
    %put ERROR: ISDIR: %sysfunc(sysmsg());
  %end;

  &result

%mend;

%put %isDir(iPath=&sasdir/common/macros);
%put %isDir(iPath=&sasdir/kxjfdkebnefe);
%put %isDir(iPath=&sasdir/kxjfdkebnefe, iQuiet=0);
%put %isDir(iPath=c:\temp);

/******************************************************************************
** PROGRAM:  FILE_LIST.SAS
**
** DESCRIPTION: RETURNS THE LIST OF FILES IN A DIRECTORY SEPERATED BY THE
**              SPECIFIED DELIMITER. RETURNS AN EMPTY STRING IF THE THE 
**              DIRECTORY CAN'T BE READ OR DOES NOT EXIST.
**
** PARAMETERS: iPath      : THE FULL PATH TO EXAMINE.  NOTE THAT / AND \ ARE 
**                          TREATED THE SAME SO &SASDIR/COMMON/MACROS IS THE 
**                          SAME AS &SASDIR\COMMON\MACROS. WORKS WITH BOTH UNIX 
**                          AND WINDOWS.
**             iFilter    : SPECIFY A BASIC FILTER TO THE FILENAMES, NO REGULAR 
**                          EXPRESSIONS OR WILDCARDS.
**             iFiles_only: 0=RETURN FILES AND FOLDERS
**                          1=RETURN FILES ONLY.
**             iDelimiter : SPECIFY THE DELIMITER TO SEPERATE THE RESULTS BY.
******************************************************************************/
/*
** TODO: DOESNT CATER FOR MACRO CHARS IN FILENAMES. FIX SOMETIME.
** TODO: IMPROVE THE FILTER. JUST A SIMPLE IF STATEMENT AT THE MOMENT.
*/
%macro file_list(iPath=, iFilter=, iFiles_only=0, iDelimiter=|);
  %local result did dname cnt num_members filename;

  %let result=;

  %if %sysfunc(filename(dname,&iPath)) eq 0 %then %do;

    %let did = %sysfunc(dopen(&dname));
    %let num_members = %sysfunc(dnum(&did));

    %do cnt=1 %to &num_members;
      %let filename = %sysfunc(dread(&did,&cnt));
      %if "&filename" ne "" %then %do;
        %if &iFiles_only %then %do;
          %if not %isDir(iPath=&iPath/&filename) %then %do;
            %if "&iFilter" ne "" %then %do;
              %if %index(%lowcase(&filename),%lowcase(&iFilter)) %then %do;
                %let result = &result%str(&iDelimiter)&filename;
              %end;
            %end;
            %else %do;
              %let result = &result%str(&iDelimiter)&filename;
            %end;
          %end;
        %end;
        %else %do;
          %if "&iFilter" ne "" %then %do;
            %if %index(%lowcase(&filename),%lowcase(&iFilter)) %then %do;
              %let result = &result%str(&iDelimiter)&filename;
            %end;
          %end;
          %else %do;
            %let result = &result%str(&iDelimiter)&filename;
          %end;
        %end;
      %end;
      %else %do;
        %put ERROR: (CMN_MAC.FILE_LIST) FILE CANNOT BE READ.;
        %put %sysfunc(sysmsg());
      %end;
    %end;

  %end;
  %else %do;
    %put ERROR: (CMN_MAC.FILE_LIST) PATH DOES NOT EXIST OR CANNOT BE OPENED.;
    %put %sysfunc(sysmsg());
  %end;

  /*
  ** RETURN THE RESULT.  TRIM THE LEADING DELIMITER OFF THE FRONT OF THE RESULTS.
  */
  %if "&result" ne "" %then %do;
    %substr(&result,2)
  %end;

%mend; 



**
** EXAMPLES - HAVENT TESTED THE LAST TWO YET BUT THEY SHOULD WORK IF SYNTAX IS CORRECT
*;

%put %file_list(iPath=c:\temp);

%put %file_list(iPath=c:\xxdffsds);

%put %file_list(iPath=c:\rob\SASDev\, iFilter=a);

%put %file_list(iPath=c:\rob\SASDev\,iFiles_only=1);

%put %file_list(iPath=/tmp/unix_sasdir,iFiles_only=1);

data x;
  file_list = "%file_list(iPath=c:\temp)";
run;

proc sql noprint;
  insert into my_table values ("%file_list(iPath=c:\temp,iDelimiter=%str(","))");
quit;
2

Here's one that unscrambles the order of quoting and unquoting:

%let command =%unquote(%str(%')dir "&baseDir.data\*txt"%str(%'));

filename datain pipe &command;

where macro variable basedir can contain spaces and so can the filenames. This combination of %unquote and %str(%') is a frequently occuring macro idiom.

"what if I have single quote in my dir?"

Handling this situation requires a macro quoting function, such as %bquote(); Continuing the example above, this:

%let command =%unquote(%str(%')dir "%bquote(&baseDir.data\*txt)"%str(%'));

should do it.

To avoid infinite iterations of this kind of question, look at Ian Whitlock's paper, A Serious Look at Macro Quoting, which is available here;

There are (many) others, but this is the most widely cited. A little note: anything by Ian Whitlock is probably worthwhile. He writes clearly and his understanding of SAS issues is awesome.

1

We use this little macro

%macro getdir(dir=,redirect=, switch=);
    options noxwait xsync;
    %if %length(&switch)=0 %then %let switch=b;
    data _null_; 
      xcmd='dir "' || "&dir" || '"' || "/&switch " || ">" || "&redirect";
      put 'generated the following command: ' xcmd=; 
      rc=system(xcmd);
      put 'result code of above command: ' rc=;
    run;
%mend getdir;

Sample Call

%getdir(dir=c:\temp\,redirect=c:\temp\dir.txt) *run;

If you run in batch and don't have the option noxwait xsync the job will hang on the server waiting for an operator response.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.