Bio::OntologyIO(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Bio::OntologyIO(3pm) |
Bio::OntologyIO - Parser factory for Ontology formats
use Bio::OntologyIO; my $parser = Bio::OntologyIO->new(-format => "go", -file=> $file); while(my $ont = $parser->next_ontology()) { print "read ontology ",$ont->name()," with ", scalar($ont->get_root_terms)," root terms, and ", scalar($ont->get_leaf_terms)," leaf terms\n"; }
This is the parser factory for different ontology sources and formats. Conceptually, it is very similar to Bio::SeqIO, but the difference is that the chunk of data returned as an object is an entire ontology.
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The rest of the documentation details each of the object methods. Internal methods are usually preceded with a _
Title : new Usage : my $parser = Bio::OntologyIO->new(-format => 'go', @args); Function: Returns a stream of ontologies opened on the specified input for the specified format. Returns : An ontology parser (an instance of Bio::OntologyIO) initialized for the specified format. Args : Named parameters. Common parameters are -format - the format of the input; the following are presently supported: goflat: DAG-Edit Gene Ontology flat files go : synonymous to goflat soflat: DAG-Edit Sequence Ontology flat files so : synonymous to soflat simplehierarchy: text format with one term per line and indentation giving the hierarchy evoc : synonymous to simplehierarchy interpro: InterPro XML interprosax: InterPro XML - this is actually not a Bio::OntologyIO compliant parser; instead it persists terms as they are encountered. L<Bio::OntologyIO::Handlers::InterPro_BioSQL_Handler> obo : OBO format style from Gene Ontology Consortium -file - the file holding the data -fh - the stream providing the data (-file and -fh are mutually exclusive) -ontology_name - the name of the ontology -engine - the L<Bio::Ontology::OntologyEngineI> object to be reused (will be created otherwise); note that every L<Bio::Ontology::OntologyI> will qualify as well since that one inherits from the former. -term_factory - the ontology term factory to use. Provide a value only if you know what you are doing. DAG-Edit flat file parsers will usually also accept the following parameters. -defs_file - the name of the file holding the term definitions -files - an array ref holding the file names (for GO, there will usually be 3 files: component.ontology, function.ontology, process.ontology) Other parameters are specific to the parsers.
Title : format Usage : $format = $parser->format() Function: Get the ontology format Returns : ontology format Args : none
Title : next_ontology Usage : $ont = $stream->next_ontology() Function: Reads the next ontology object from the stream and returns it. Returns : a L<Bio::Ontology::OntologyI> compliant object, or undef at the end of the stream Args : none
Title : term_factory Usage : $obj->term_factory($newval) Function: Get/set the ontology term factory to use. As a user of this module it is not necessary to call this method as there will be default. In order to change the default, the easiest way is to instantiate L<Bio::Ontology::TermFactory> with the proper -type argument. Most if not all parsers will actually use this very implementation, so even easier than the aforementioned way is to simply call $ontio->term_factory->type("Bio::Ontology::MyTerm"). Example : Returns : value of term_factory (a Bio::Factory::ObjectFactoryI object) Args : on set, new value (a Bio::Factory::ObjectFactoryI object, optional)
Some of these are actually 'protected' in OO speak, which means you may or will want to utilize them in a derived ontology parser, but you should not call them from outside.
Title : _load_format_module Usage : *INTERNAL OntologyIO stuff* Function: Loads up (like use) a module at run time on demand Example : Returns : Args :
2020-10-28 | perl v5.30.3 |