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Stata 13 windows + OS 系统 32位/64位可升级版 下载

已有 34715 次阅读 2015-1-30 15:09 |个人分类:STATA|系统分类:科研笔记

http://bbs.pinggu.org/thread-3041281-1-1.html


http://pan.baidu.com/s/1pJv8i7L   

我的网盘:STATA 13 WIN + OS 32/64版本 ,大小 578M,长期有效。


Stata 13.1 MP 32位/64位可升级版操作系统: Windows (64-bit and 32-bit)

安装步骤:
第一步:解压缩,压缩包包含安装程序Stata13_setup.msi 和 破解补丁目录Crack
第二步:点击Stata13_setup.msi ,根据windows操作系统,自行选择32/64位MP版。静静等待安装完成。
第三步:把破解补丁目录Crack中的Stata.lic复制粘贴到安装目录。运行程序,最后关键的一步是去掉自动在线注册的勾选项。

第四步:手动更新!!!

手动更新升级包网址:http://www.stata.com/support/updates/stata13/stata13update_win.zip


我开始时也郁闷了,后来自己摸索出来,分享给大家喽。比如你下好的更新包放在  I:迅雷下载stata13update_winstata13update_win,不要进去ado,docs,win,win-mp 等等文件里面找了,就把这一群文件的母文件夹作为更新包就好,比如上面我存放更新包的路径,第一个update-win打开之后是又一个update_win,打开第二个里面就是ado,docs 等等,那么你就在手动更新的更新包地址那里输第二个update_win就可以了,它会自动更新文件里面的所有子文件


 

手动更新说明:
1. Type about in Stata and note the "Revision" date. If you see a date earlier than "03 Jul 2014", you need to update Stata.


2. Extract the file you downloaded to a temporary location on your system.


3.Type db update in Stata and browse to the extracted update directory. Click OK and follow any instructions you are given.


4.  Type about again. 结果窗口(Result Window)显示如下:


Stata/MP 13.1 for Windows (64-bit x86-64)
Revision 03 Jul 2014
Copyright 1985-2013 StataCorp LP

Total physical memory:     4087148 KB
Available physical memory: 1818352 KB

3-user 8-core Stata network perpetual license:
      Serial number:  501306208483
        Licensed to:  IDRE-UCLA
                      IDRE-UCLA

百度云地址(更新授权码):
http://pan.baidu.com/s/1pJ4uWe3    2015/01/30 验证有效


Stata 各版本的比较:

§ Stata/MP: Stata 的最快版本(用于双核以及多核/多处理器电脑)

§ Stata/SE: 用于大数据集的 Stata

§ Stata/IC: Stata 的标准版

§ Small Stata: Stata 的小型学生版 (仅用于教学目的)


图片1.jpg 



http://www.stata.com/order/new/edu/gradplans/student-pricing/nodl/


ALL PRICES IN USD

New purchasesStudent pricing

Students currently enrolled at degree-granting institutions that do not participate in the Campus GradPlan program may purchase Stata at the prices listed below. Proof of student status (i.e., copy of your university ID card) is required.

Small StataFor small datasets.
PERPETUAL LICENSE(not available) 
ANNUAL LICENSE(Students only) 
 $49SIX-MONTH LICENSE(Students only) 
 $35
Stata/ICFor the price conscious.
PERPETUAL LICENSE
 $189ANNUAL LICENSE
 $98SIX-MONTH LICENSE(Students only) 
 $69
Stata/SEFor general-purpose users.
PERPETUAL LICENSE
 $395ANNUAL LICENSE
 $235SIX-MONTH LICENSE(Not available) 
Stata/MP
Info
For power users.
Select cores 2-cores 4-cores
PERPETUAL LICENSE
 $995
Product featuresSmall StataStata/ICStata/SEStata/MP
Maximum number of variables
Info
992,04732,76732,767
Maximum number of observations
Info
1,200Over 2.14 billionOver 2.14 billionOver 2.14 billion
Maximum number of right-hand-side variables
Info
9879810,99810,998
Multicore support
Info
---Yes!
Complete suite of statistical features
Info
Yes!Yes!Yes!Yes!
Publication-quality graphics
Info
Yes!Yes!Yes!Yes!
Matrix programming languageYes!Yes!Yes!Yes!
Complete PDF documentation
Info
Yes!Yes!Yes!Yes!
Complete technical supportYes!Yes!Yes!Yes!
Includes within-release updatesYes!Yes!Yes!Yes!
64-bit version availableYes!Yes!Yes!Yes!
Windows, Mac, or Unix
Info
Yes!Yes!Yes!Yes!




Finding and Installing User-Written Stata Programs

There are a tremendous number of user-written programs for Stata available which, once installed, act just like official Stata commands. Some are conveniences, like outreg for formatting regression output. Others calculate results Stata itself does not, such aspolychoric for polychoric correlations. A few represent major extensions of Stata's capabilities, such as ice and mim for multiple imputation or gllamm for mixed models. Most of these programs are stored at Boston College's Statistical Software Componentsarchive (or SSC, but not to be confused with the UW's Social Science Computing Cooperative or SSCC) .

You are welcome to install any user-written commands you desire to use, even in the labs, on Winstat or on the Linux servers, because Stata at the SSCC is set up to store the programs you install in your home directory. Thus you don't need to worry about programs you install causing problems for others. On the other hand, this means you need to install the user-written programs you want yourself. The SSCC does not try to identify some useful set of user-written programs and make them available to everyone.

This article will discuss finding, installing, and updating user-written programs. Fortunately Stata includes commands which make this very easy to do.

Finding User-Written Programs

If you know the name of the program you want to use, you can go directly to Installing User-Written Programs. However, it's much more common to know what you want to do without knowing what program (if any) can do it. This is a job for Stata's finditcommand.

For example, suppose you wanted to do something with Heckman selection models but don't know what command to use. Type:

findit heckman

The result is a tremendous amount of information. The findit command first searches Stata's official help files and notes that there is an official heckman command and several other related commands (this makes findit a powerful tool for figuring out how to do things in Stata in general, not just for finding user-written programs). It then searches Stata's web site and locates several FAQ entries, plus an example on UCLA's large statistics web site. It then begins to list relevant user-written programs, organized into "packages." Programs that were described in the Stata Journal or the older Stata Technical Bulletin are listed first.

You can click on each package to view a very brief description, including a list of files (one package may contain several related programs). Also note the (click here to install) link. Clicking on the .hlp file will get you the help entry for the program, which you can use to decide if the program will do what you need.

Installing User-Written Programs

If you know the name of the package you want to install, you can install it by typing

ssc install package

Alternatively, if you identified the package you want using findit you can install it by clicking on its (click here to install) link. However, avoid installing any package that is directly tied to an article in the Stata Journal or the Stata Technical Bulletin. These packages contain the program as it was described in the article and are not updated. Look for another package containing the program that is not tied to an article and, if one exists, install that instead.

For example, if you type

findit ice

the first three ice packages you'll see are (as of 4/30/2008) stb0067_1, stb0067_2and stb0067_3, but none of these contain the latest version of ice. The package which does is simply called ice. As the author of ice (Patrick Royston) makes further changes and improvements, the ice package will be updated accordingly. If he writes another Stata Journal article describing the changes he has made the result will likely be anstb0067_4 package, but if you installed stb0067_3 you won't get the new version automatically.

(Getting the right version of ice is particularly important because multiply imputed data sets created by one version cannot be used by different versions--and the output of older versions can't be analyzed using mim at all. The newer versions of ice also include more capabilities than the older ones.)

Unfortunately, the ice package you want to install isn't trivial to find--it's about a third of the way through the very long list of results you get from findit ice. However, packages are usually named after the main ado file they contain, and that file is normally listed first in the package description. So if you've looked at stb0067_3 and decided that program will meet your needs, noting that ice.ado is the first file listed is enough to know that you can probably install the latest version by typing

ssc install ice

Updating User-Written Programs

While few user-written programs are updated as frequently as ice, it's still important to get the latest versions of any user-written programs you install. Sometimes updates will include important bug fixes, though the SSC archive has quality control measures in place to try to catch bugs before the program is distributed.

The easiest way to check that your user-written programs are up-to-date is to type:

adoupdate

The adoupdate command notes where each package was downloaded from and goes back to that location to see if a more recent version is available. If there is, you can install the latest version by typing:

adoupdate, update

You can get a list of the packages you've installed by typing:

ado dir

This can be very helpful for catching things like having downloaded stb0067_3 rather than ice. You can remove a package by typing

ado uninstall package

where package should be replaced by either the name of the package you want to remove or the number it is given by ado dir, including the brackets around it.

For example, suppose you downloaded some earlier version of ice that was associated with a Stata Journal article. Just typing

ssc install ice

will fail because you already have a copy of ice.ado and all the other related files, and the installer refuses to overwrite them. Thus you need to identify and remove the older version. To do so, type:

ado dir

If the results included the entry

[6] package st0067_3 from http://www.stata-journal.com/software/sj7-4
SJ7-4 st0067_3. Update: Multiple imputation of missing...

you could remove it by typing either

ado uninstall st0067_3

or

ado uninstall [6]

Then

ssc install ice

will successfully install the latest version. You should then type

adoupdate

periodically to ensure that ice stays up-to-date.




In Stata, how do I change the path to user-written ado files?

By default, Stata for Windows uses the c:ado directory for user-written ado files. You can list Stata's system directories by executing the .sysdir command:

.sysdir STATA: C:Program FilesStata11 UPDATES: C:Program FilesStata11adoupdates BASE: C:Program FilesStata11adobase SITE: C:Program FilesStata11adosite PLUS: c:adoplus PERSONAL: c:adopersonal OLDPLACE: c:ado

If you need to change the default path, run the .sysdir set command. Suppose you store Long and Freese's SPost module in the e:adoplus directory of a memory stick or flash card. You would then need to run the following command:

.sysdir set PLUS "e:adoplus" or .sysdir set PERSONAL "e:adoplus"

Stata will then find user-written commands in the e:adoplus directory.

If you have questions about using statistical and mathematical software at Indiana University, email UITS Research Analytics. Research Analytics is located on the IU Bloomington campus at Woodburn Hall 200, and is open for consultation by appointment Monday-Friday 9am-5pm. For more, see Research Analytics, or call 812-855-4724 (IUB) or 317-278-4740 (IUPUI).



Keep your user-written ado-files updated
 
From time to time, authors of user-written additions to Stata (called packages) update their ado-files to add more features or correct for bugs. To check whether the packages you have downloaded require updating, type:

adoupdate

For more information on -adoupdate-, see “help adoupdate”. Note that -adoupdate- does not check updates for official Stata files. Use -update query- to check if you have the latest Stata ado-, executable-, or utility- files (see “help update”). For convenience, you can enable automatic update check of official Stata files by typing “set update_query on”.










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