Please tell us more about your application? Are the values ordered? Are you trying to find groups of variables or groups of cases (rows, subjects, entities)? How many cases (rows) do you have? How many variables? Do all of the variables have 3 values? Are you trying to see how an existing partition of cases or variables works with other cases or variables? Often it is helpful to us to know the substantive meaning of your variables, and what a case represents. SPSS is widely available but there are also many specific purpose programs around depending on what you are trying to do. If SPSS itself does not have a procedure, you can call any R procedures from within SPSS. So you might be able to use several procedures. If you are partitioning variables into sets, then you might look at Categorical Principal Components analysis (CATPCA). If you are partitioning cases into sets, then you might look TWOSTEP which clusters cases based on either/both categorical and continuous variables If you have an existing 3 value variable, that you want to see how the cases with each value differ on another, TREES, CATREG, and DISCRIMINANT might be what you could use. If you have three sets of variables, you can confirm how well a three factor solution fits in CATPCA by specifying the number of factors you want. Art Kendall Social Research Consultants Arnaud Trollé wrote: > Hello, > > I'd like to cluster categorical data (3 categories) by means of a partitioning > method; I'm quite a beginner in that field and I would need to be enlightened. > From a bibliographic review I carried out about that topic, it appeared to me > that a method is often used :the k-modes method. From her/his experience, > could anyone confirm or deny that it is the case ? If denied, which method > could be more "powerful" ? > > Thanks in advance. > > Best Regards. > Arnaud. > PhD Student in Acoustics. > Lyon, France. > > ---------------------------------------------- > CLASS-L list. > Instructions: http://www.classification-society.org/csna/lists.html#class-l > > > ---------------------------------------------- CLASS-L list. Instructions: http://www.classification-society.org/csna/lists.html#class-l