UCLA has a great stats help cite too (see link attached).
Have you tried Google? Not being sarcastic, but google usually provides the answer. Last year I had to do some consulting and the wanted the analyses done in SPSS and I used google to find my way around.
SPSS sometimes ends out these tiny books with a quick guide.
UCLA has a great stats help cite too (see link attached).
Have you tried Google? Not being sarcastic, but google usually provides the answer. Last year I had to do some consulting and the wanted the analyses done in SPSS and I used google to find my way around.
SPSS sometimes ends out these tiny books with a quick guide.
Quick reference should be the guide for Spss and isn't application. You will find free digital guides for Spss as many as you want over the internet. There are printed or digital books for the software and how to use it, which provide step by step guides for each feature and how apply. If you are not sure and in case you are looking for application similar to spss but free , take a look at this link. I have used this and has a lot of features of spss http://www.gnu.org/software/pspp/