Boulder::Unigene(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Boulder::Unigene(3pm) |
Boulder::Unigene - Fetch Unigene data records as parsed Boulder Stones
# parse a file of Unigene records $ug = new Boulder::Unigene(-accessor=>'File', -param => '/data/unigene/Hs.dat'); while (my $s = $ug->get) { print $s->Identifier; print $s->Gene; } # parse flatfile records yourself open (UG,"/data/unigene/Hs.dat"); local $/ = "*RECORD*"; while (<UG>) { my $s = Boulder::Unigene->parse($_); # etc. }
Boulder::Unigene provides retrieval and parsing services for UNIGENE records
Boulder::Unigene provides retrieval and parsing services for NCBI Unigene records. It returns Unigene entries in Stone format, allowing easy access to the various fields and values. Boulder::Unigene is a descendent of Boulder::Stream, and provides a stream-like interface to a series of Stone objects.
Access to Unigene is provided by one accessors, which give access to local Unigene database. When you create a new Boulder::Unigene stream, you provide the accessors, along with accessor-specific parameters that control what entries to fetch. The accessors is:
It is also possible to parse a single Unigene entry from a text string stored in a scalar variable, returning a Stone object.
This section lists the public methods that the Boulder::Unigene class makes available.
# Local fetch via File $ug=new Boulder::Unigene(-accessor => 'File', -param => '/data/unigene/Hs.dat');
The new() method creates a new Boulder::Unigene stream on the accessor provided. The only possible accessors is File. If successful, the method returns the stream object. Otherwise it returns undef.
new() takes the following arguments:
-accessor Name of the accessor to use -param Parameters to pass to the accessor
Specify the accessor to use with the -accessor argument. If not specified, it defaults to File.
-param is an accessor-specific argument. The possibilities is:
For File, the -param argument must point to a string-valued scalar, which will be interpreted as the path to the file to read Unigene entries from.
The tags returned by the parsing operation are taken from the names shown in the Flat file Hs.dat since no better description of them is provided yet by the database source producer.
These are tags that appear at the top level of the parsed Unigene entry.
Example:
my $identifierNo = $s->Identifier;
Example:
my $titledef=$s->Title;
The TXMAP tag points to a Stone record that contains multiple subtags. Each subtag is the name of a feature which points, in turn, to a Stone that describes the feature's location and other attributes.
Each feature will contain one or more of the following subtags:
Boulder, Boulder::Blast, Boulder::Genbank
Lincoln Stein <lstein@cshl.org>. Luca I.G. Toldo <luca.toldo@merck.de>
Copyright (c) 1997 Lincoln D. Stein Copyright (c) 1999 Luca I.G. Toldo
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See DISCLAIMER.txt for disclaimers of warranty.
2021-01-05 | perl v5.32.0 |