| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445 | 
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------# $File: statistics,v 1.3 2022/03/24 15:48:58 christos Exp $# statistics:  file(1) magic for statistics related software## From Remy Rampin# Stata is a statistical software tool that was created in 1985. While I# don't personally use it, data files in its native (proprietary) format# are common (.dta files).# # Because they are so common, especially in statistical and social# sciences, Stata files and SPSS files can be opened by a lot of modern# software, for example Python's pandas package provides built-in# support for them (read_stata() and read_spss()).# # I noticed that the magic database includes an entry for SPSS files but# not Stata files. Stata files for Stata 13 and newer (formats 117, 118,# and 119) always begin with the string "<stata_dta><header>" as per# https://www.stata.com/help.cgi?dta#definition# # The format version number always follows, for example:#    <stata_dta><header><release>117</release>#    <stata_dta><header><release>118</release># # Therefore the following line would do the trick:#    0       string  <stata_dta><header>     Stata Data File# # (I'm sure the version number could be captured as well but I did not# manage this without a regex)# # Unfortunately the previous formats (created by Stata before 13, which# was released 2013) are harder to recognize. Format 115 starts with the# four bytes 0x73010100 or 0x73020100, format 114 with 0x72010100 or# 0x72020100, format 113 with 0x71010101 or 0x71020101.# # For additional reference, the Library of Congress website has an entry# for the Stata Data File Format 118:# https://www.loc.gov/preservation/digital/formats/fdd/fdd000471.shtml# # Example of those files can be found on Zenodo:# https://zenodo.org/search?page=1&size=20&q=&file_type=dta0	string	\<stata_dta\>\<header\>\<release\>	Stata Data File>&0	regex	[0-9]+					(Release %s)
 |