![]() Sometimes the "student" version of software is limited to small data sets, limits you from exporting your analysis results in certain ways, etc. This also presumes that the academic version is not hobbled so badly that it won't accept your data. I've always assumed that SPSS would be expensive (it is rarely good to assume.), but the academic price (which I assume you can take advantage of, being at a college) may be reachable. The web site suggests that the cost of XLSTAT may be relatively inexpensive. Going back and rereading your July 17 post, perhaps XLSTAT would do what you need- again, I haven't done the hard work of understanding how best to analyze the data you have: M Khan's suggestion to use principle components analysis (PCA) may be worth investigating, depending on the available data and the questions you are asking. However, when I click it, it takes me to the first reference within the document and not to the bottom of the document where the actual list of endnotes is. I used the cross reference feature to insert a refernce to an existing endnote ( Insert>Reference>Cross-Reference). The hard part is actually evaluating your needs, deciding on the best software match, and learning how to use it. Refering to the same endnote more than once. Advice is free, or, as we have a saying in the USA, "talk is cheap" :-). ![]()
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