Stata for Mac includes
Stata for Mac comes in three editions:
For details, see Which Stata is right for me?
Frequently Asked Questions
Mary, his mother, looks up from folding laundry. “What do you mean, someone else?”
Sheldon’s left eye twitches. He did not forget. He omitted it for brevity. But before he can retort, Dr. Sturgis claps his hands together. “Wonderful! You two are going to be a great team. Today, we’re working on a thought experiment involving a superluminal particle.”
“Dad,” Sheldon says quietly. “I’m not the smartest person I know anymore.”
The next morning, he presents his corrected solution to Dr. Sturgis. Paige is there, chewing on a new lollipop. She looks at his work. She reads it. Then she looks up at Sheldon with genuine respect.
Sheldon walks home that day, alone. He doesn’t go to his room. He doesn’t watch Star Trek . He goes to the garage, where his father is fixing the lawnmower. George Sr. looks up, surprised. Sheldon never comes to the garage.
Sheldon thinks for a moment. Then he returns to his room. He doesn’t sleep. He works all night. He doesn’t try to beat Paige at her own game—intuitive leaps and doodles. Instead, he does what he does best: rigorous, obsessive, line-by-line analysis. He builds a model. He checks it three times. He even finds a flaw in Paige’s solution—a small one, but a real one. She had assumed symmetry where none existed.