Bio::SearchIO(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Bio::SearchIO(3pm) |
Bio::SearchIO - Driver for parsing Sequence Database Searches (BLAST, FASTA, ...)
use Bio::SearchIO; # format can be 'fasta', 'blast', 'exonerate', ... my $searchio = Bio::SearchIO->new( -format => 'blastxml', -file => 'blastout.xml' ); while ( my $result = $searchio->next_result() ) { while( my $hit = $result->next_hit ) { # process the Bio::Search::Hit::HitI object while( my $hsp = $hit->next_hsp ) { # process the Bio::Search::HSP::HSPI object } } }
This is a driver for instantiating a parser for report files from sequence database searches. This object serves as a wrapper for the format parsers in Bio::SearchIO::* - you should not need to ever use those format parsers directly. (For people used to the SeqIO system it, we are deliberately using the same pattern).
Once you get a SearchIO object, calling next_result() gives you back a Bio::Search::Result::ResultI compliant object, which is an object that represents one Blast/Fasta/HMMER whatever report.
A list of module names and formats is below:
blast BLAST (WUBLAST, NCBIBLAST,bl2seq) fasta FASTA -m9 and -m0 blasttable BLAST -m9 or -m8 output (both NCBI and WUBLAST tabular) megablast MEGABLAST psl UCSC PSL format waba WABA output axt AXT format sim4 Sim4 hmmer HMMER2 hmmpfam and hmmsearch or HMMER3 hmmscan and hmmsearch exonerate Exonerate CIGAR and VULGAR format blastxml NCBI BLAST XML wise Genewise -genesf format
Also see the SearchIO HOWTO: http://bioperl.org/howtos/SearchIO_HOWTO.html
User feedback is an integral part of the evolution of this and other Bioperl modules. Send your comments and suggestions preferably to the Bioperl mailing list. Your participation is much appreciated.
bioperl-l@bioperl.org - General discussion http://bioperl.org/wiki/Mailing_lists - About the mailing lists
Please direct usage questions or support issues to the mailing list:
bioperl-l@bioperl.org
rather than to the module maintainer directly. Many experienced and reponsive experts will be able look at the problem and quickly address it. Please include a thorough description of the problem with code and data examples if at all possible.
Report bugs to the Bioperl bug tracking system to help us keep track of the bugs and their resolution. Bug reports can be submitted via the web:
https://github.com/bioperl/bioperl-live/issues
Email jason-at-bioperl.org Email sac-at-bioperl.org
The rest of the documentation details each of the object methods. Internal methods are usually preceded with a _
Title : new Usage : my $obj = Bio::SearchIO->new(); Function: Builds a new Bio::SearchIO object Returns : Bio::SearchIO initialized with the correct format Args : -file => $filename -format => format -fh => filehandle to attach to -result_factory => object implementing Bio::Factory::ObjectFactoryI -hit_factory => object implementing Bio::Factory::ObjectFactoryI -hsp_factory => object implementing Bio::Factory::ObjectFactoryI -writer => object implementing Bio::SearchIO::SearchWriterI -output_format => output format, which will dynamically load writer -inclusion_threshold => e-value threshold for inclusion in the PSI-BLAST score matrix model -signif => float or scientific notation number to be used as a P- or Expect value cutoff -check_all_hits => boolean. Check all hits for significance against significance criteria. Default = false. If false, stops processing hits after the first non-significant hit or the first hit that fails the hit_filter call. This speeds parsing, taking advantage of the fact that the hits are processed in the order they appear in the report. -min_query_len => integer to be used as a minimum for query sequence length. Reports with query sequences below this length will not be processed. default = no minimum length. -best => boolean. Only process the best hit of each report; default = false.
See Bio::Factory::ObjectFactoryI, Bio::SearchIO::SearchWriterI
Any factory objects in the arguments are passed along to the SearchResultEventBuilder object which holds these factories and sets default ones if none are supplied as arguments.
Title : newFh Usage : $fh = Bio::SearchIO->newFh(-file=>$filename, -format=>'Format') Function: does a new() followed by an fh() Example : $fh = Bio::SearchIO->newFh(-file=>$filename, -format=>'Format') $result = <$fh>; # read a ResultI object print $fh $result; # write a ResultI object Returns : filehandle tied to the Bio::SearchIO::Fh class Args :
Title : fh Usage : $obj->fh Function: Example : $fh = $obj->fh; # make a tied filehandle $result = <$fh>; # read a ResultI object print $fh $result; # write a ResultI object Returns : filehandle tied to the Bio::SearchIO::Fh class Args :
Title : format Usage : $format = $obj->format() Function: Get the search format Returns : search format Args : none
Title : attach_EventHandler Usage : $parser->attatch_EventHandler($handler) Function: Adds an event handler to listen for events Returns : none Args : Bio::SearchIO::EventHandlerI
See Bio::SearchIO::EventHandlerI
Title : _eventHandler Usage : private Function: Get the EventHandler Returns : Bio::SearchIO::EventHandlerI Args : none
See Bio::SearchIO::EventHandlerI
Title : next_result Usage : $result = stream->next_result Function: Reads the next ResultI object from the stream and returns it. Certain driver modules may encounter entries in the stream that are either misformatted or that use syntax not yet understood by the driver. If such an incident is recoverable, e.g., by dismissing a feature of a feature table or some other non-mandatory part of an entry, the driver will issue a warning. In the case of a non-recoverable situation an exception will be thrown. Do not assume that you can resume parsing the same stream after catching the exception. Note that you can always turn recoverable errors into exceptions by calling $stream->verbose(2) (see Bio::Root::RootI POD page). Returns : A Bio::Search::Result::ResultI object Args : n/a
See Bio::Root::RootI
Title : write_result Usage : $stream->write_result($result_result, @other_args) Function: Writes data from the $result_result object into the stream. : Delegates to the to_string() method of the associated : WriterI object. Returns : 1 for success and 0 for error Args : Bio::Search:Result::ResultI object, : plus any other arguments for the Writer Throws : Bio::Root::Exception if a Writer has not been set.
See Bio::Root::Exception
Title : write_report Usage : $stream->write_report(SearchIO stream, @other_args) Function: Writes data directly from the SearchIO stream object into the : writer. This is mainly useful if one has multiple ResultI objects : in a SearchIO stream and you don't want to reiterate header/footer : between each call. Returns : 1 for success and 0 for error Args : Bio::SearchIO stream object, : plus any other arguments for the Writer Throws : Bio::Root::Exception if a Writer has not been set.
See Bio::Root::Exception
Title : writer Usage : $writer = $stream->writer; Function: Sets/Gets a SearchWriterI object to be used for this searchIO. Returns : 1 for success and 0 for error Args : Bio::SearchIO::SearchWriterI object (when setting) Throws : Bio::Root::Exception if a non-Bio::SearchIO::SearchWriterI object is passed in.
Title : result_count Usage : $num = $stream->result_count; Function: Gets the number of Blast results that have been successfully parsed at the point of the method call. This is not the total # of results in the file. Returns : integer Args : none Throws : none
Title : inclusion_threshold Usage : my $incl_thresh = $isreb->inclusion_threshold; : $isreb->inclusion_threshold(1e-5); Function: Get/Set the e-value threshold for inclusion in the PSI-BLAST score matrix model (blastpgp) that was used for generating the reports being parsed. Returns : number (real) Default value: $Bio::SearchIO::IteratedSearchResultEventBuilder::DEFAULT_INCLUSION_THRESHOLD Args : number (real) (e.g., 0.0001 or 1e-4 )
Usage : $obj->max_significance(); Purpose : Set/Get the P or Expect value used as significance screening cutoff. This is the value of the -signif parameter supplied to new(). Hits with P or E-value above this are skipped. Returns : Scientific notation number with this format: 1.0e-05. Argument : Scientific notation number or float (when setting) Comments : Screening of significant hits uses the data provided on the : description line. For NCBI BLAST1 and WU-BLAST, this data : is P-value. for NCBI BLAST2 it is an Expect value.
Synonym for max_significance()
Usage : $obj->min_score(); Purpose : Set/Get the Blast score used as screening cutoff. This is the value of the -score parameter supplied to new(). Hits with scores below this are skipped. Returns : Integer or scientific notation number. Argument : Integer or scientific notation number (when setting) Comments : Screening of significant hits uses the data provided on the : description line.
Usage : $obj->min_query_length(); Purpose : Gets the query sequence length used as screening criteria. This is the value of the -min_query_len parameter supplied to new(). Hits with sequence length below this are skipped. Returns : Integer Argument : n/a
Title : best_hit_only Usage : print "only getting best hit.\n" if $obj->best_hit_only; Purpose : Set/Get the indicator for whether or not to process only : the best BlastHit. Returns : Boolean (1 | 0) Argument : Boolean (1 | 0) (when setting)
Title : check_all_hits Usage : print "checking all hits.\n" if $obj->check_all_hits; Purpose : Set/Get the indicator for whether or not to process all hits. : If false, the parser will stop processing hits after the : the first non-significance hit or the first hit that fails : any hit filter. Returns : Boolean (1 | 0) Argument : Boolean (1 | 0) (when setting)
Title : _load_format_module Usage : *INTERNAL SearchIO stuff* Function: Loads up (like use) a module at run time on demand Example : Returns : Args :
Title : _get_seq_identifiers Usage : my ($gi, $acc,$ver) = &_get_seq_identifiers($id) Function: Private function to get the gi, accession, version data for an ID (if it is in NCBI format) Returns : 3-pule of gi, accession, version Args : ID string to process (NCBI format)
Title : _guess_format Usage : $obj->_guess_format($filename) Function: Example : Returns : guessed format of filename (lower case) Args :
2020-10-28 | perl v5.30.3 |