

Some techniques grab the users attention, but often dont add anything useful to the message the map is trying to convey (such as 3D tricks, or flashy/gratuitous images and infographics). Giving your maps more visual impact There are many ways to add more 'visual impact' to your maps. This example is building on earlier blog entries and highlights the: The Map in my Head (Wrong) My gut instincts. Since you have the data from the 2nd year first in your data, it starts drawing the line there, and then when it gets to the data from the first year it then connects the points on the right of the graph to the points back on the left of the graph (creating the extra/stray line across the graph).

The path of the storm is also plotted so you can see why the Cape Fear River Basin had major flooding. I think you'll need to sort your data by the date variable. In this example, North Carolina GeoSpatial data for the major river basins is downloaded and used in PROC SGMAP as SERIES statements.
#Sas 9.1 proc geodist install
Parts of North Carolina had over 30 inches of rain from the storm, and this caused many of North Carolina’s rivers to overflow their banks because the water just does not have any place to go. Click on the button to install SAS 9 Foundation (see windows below) Click next Tell SAS that you have the SAS Installation Data in a File and click next Use the Browse button to point to where you have installed the sid.txt file (in my example, I placed it in c:sid.txt), refer to Step 0a. Much of the damage was from flooding because the storm moved slowly over North and South Carolina. The PUT statement tells SAS to write the variables in the format specified to the filename specified (back.dat) in the FILE statement. In August 2018, Hurricane Florence came on shore in North Carolina. The SAS data set name NULL tells SAS to execute the DATA step as if it were creating a new SAS data set, but no observations and no variables are written to an output data set. SAS 9.1.3 and earlier SMTP e-mails do not timeout when block waiting for a response from a SMTP server: E9BB39: SN-018044: Using SMTP e-mail with SAS 9.1.
