![]() ![]() It was reassuring (at least to me) that they were stored in a generic format. Only a few months ago, I dusted off some anonymised exam marks from the 1990s for use as an example dataset for an unrefereed document about Bland-Altman analysis (Newson, 2016). And also in a form that will not be mangled by Microsoft proprietary spreadsheet software, which frequently changes data around without asking the user. ![]() And data should be in a form that I can return to decades down the line, when Microsoft proprietary formats may be dust. A spreadsheet is one or more sets of data. I think I am trying to supersede Excel before I supersede MS Word. ![]()
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