You can import many file formats into JMP and save them as data tables. JMP opens many files by default. The file formats which JMP does not support by default require specific Open Database Connectivity (ODBC) drivers.
• Comma-separated (.csv)
• .dat files that consist of text
• ESRI shapefiles (.shp)
• Flow Cytometry versions 2.0 and 3.0 (.fcs)
• Hierarchical Data Format, Version 5 (.h5)
• HTML (.htm, .html)
• JSON (.json)
• MATLAB (.m, .M)
• Microsoft Excel 1997 through 2019 on macOS (.xls, .xlsx)
• Microsoft Excel 2010 through 2019 on Windows (*.xlsx, *.xlsm)
• Minitab Portable Worksheet (.mtp)
• Plain text (.txt)
• R (.r)
• SAS transport (.xpt, .stx)
• SAS versions 7 through 9 on macOS (.sas7bdat)
• SAS versions 7 through 9 on Windows (.sas7bdat, .sas7bxat)
• SPSS (.sav)
• SQLite 3.0 or higher (.sqlite, .db, .sqlite3, .db3)
• Tab-separated (.tsv)
• Teradata database (.trd)
• Triple-S (.sss, .xml)
• xBase data files (.dbf)
• XML data files (.xml)
On both Windows and macOS, you can open SAS data sets directly through the File > Open command. See Import SAS Data Sets.
• Database (dBASE) (.ndx, .mdx) is supported with a V3+ compliant ODBC driver. .dbf files do not require an ODBC driver.
• Microsoft Access Database (.mdb) is supported with a V3+ compliant ODBC driver.
See Import Data from a Database for more information for working with databases.
Your computer’s available memory affects data import. Very large files might load slowly or not at all. Consider splitting up large files before importing them. You can then join or concatenate the tables. See “Concatenate Data Tables” and “Join Data Tables”.
Note: You can open R code (.R) and SAS program files (.sas) in JMP, but the text opens in a Script window, not in a data table.