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Variables have close relationships with dictionaries (see Dictionaries) and cases (see Cases). A variable is usually a member of some dictionary, and a case is often used to store data for the set of variables in a dictionary.
These functions report on these relationships. They may be applied only to variables that are in a dictionary.
Returns var’s index within its dictionary. The first variable in a dictionary has index 0, the next variable index 1, and so on.
The dictionary index can be influenced using dictionary functions such as dict_reorder_var (see dict_reorder_var).
Returns var’s index within a case. The case index is an index
into an array of union value
large enough to contain all the data in
the dictionary.
The returned case index can be used to access the value of var
within a case for its dictionary, as in e.g. case_data_idx
(case, var_get_case_index (var))
, but ordinarily it is more
convenient to use the data access functions that do variable-to-index
translation internally, as in e.g. case_data (case,
var)
.