Bio::DB::UpdateableSeqI(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Bio::DB::UpdateableSeqI(3pm) |
NAME¶
Bio::DB::UpdateableSeqI - An interface for writing to a database of sequences.
SYNOPSIS¶
# get a Bio::DB::UpdateableSeqI somehow eval { my ( @updatedseqs, @newseqs, @deadseqs); my $seq = $db->get_Seq_by_id('ROA1_HUMAN'); $seq->desc('a new description'); push @updatedseqs, $seq; $db->write_seq(\@updatedseqs, \@newseqs, \@deadseqs); }; if( $@ ) { print STDERR "an error when trying to write seq : $@\n"; }
DESCRIPTION¶
This module seeks to provide a simple method for pushing sequence changes back to a Sequence Database - which can be an SQL compliant database, a file based database, AceDB, etc.
AUTHOR¶
Jason Stajich <jason@bioperl.org>
Support¶
Please direct usage questions or support issues to the mailing list:
bioperl-l@bioperl.org
rather than to the module maintainer directly. Many experienced and reponsive experts will be able look at the problem and quickly address it. Please include a thorough description of the problem with code and data examples if at all possible.
Reporting Bugs¶
Report bugs to the Bioperl bug tracking system to help us keep track the bugs and their resolution. Bug reports can be submitted via the web:
https://github.com/bioperl/bioperl-live/issues
APPENDIX¶
The rest of the documentation details each of the object methods. Internal methods are usually preceded with a _
write_seq¶
Title : write_seq Usage : write_seq(\@updatedseqs, \@addedseqs, \@deadseqs) Function: updates sequences in first array, adds sequences in the second array, and removes sequences in the third array. Example : Returns : Args : arrays of sequence objects that must be obtained from Bio::DB::UpdateableSeqI.
_add_seq¶
Title : _add_seq Usage : _add_seq($seq) Function: Adds a new sequence Example : Returns : will throw an exception if sequences accession number already exists Args : a new seq object - should have an accession number
_remove_seq¶
Title : _remove_seq Usage : _remove_seq($seq) Function: Removes an existing sequence Example : Returns : will throw an exception if sequence does not exists for the primary_id Args : a seq object that was retrieved from Bio::DB::UpdateableSeqI
_update_seq¶
Title : _update_seq Usage : _update_seq($seq) Function: Updates a sequence Example : Returns : will throw an exception if sequence is out of sync from expected val. Args : a seq object that was retrieved from Bio::DB::UpdateableSeqI
Methods inherieted from Bio::DB::RandomAccessI¶
get_Seq_by_id¶
Title : get_Seq_by_id Usage : $seq = $db->get_Seq_by_id('ROA1_HUMAN') Function: Gets a Bio::Seq object by its name Returns : a Bio::Seq object Args : the id (as a string) of a sequence Throws : "id does not exist" exception
get_Seq_by_acc¶
Title : get_Seq_by_acc Usage : $seq = $db->get_Seq_by_acc('X77802'); Function: Gets a Bio::Seq object by accession number Returns : A Bio::Seq object Args : accession number (as a string) Throws : "acc does not exist" exception
Methods inheirited from Bio::DB::SeqI¶
get_PrimarySeq_stream¶
Title : get_PrimarySeq_stream Usage : $stream = get_PrimarySeq_stream Function: Makes a Bio::DB::SeqStreamI compliant object which provides a single method, next_primary_seq Returns : Bio::DB::SeqStreamI Args : none
get_all_primary_ids¶
Title : get_all_ids Usage : @ids = $seqdb->get_all_primary_ids() Function: gives an array of all the primary_ids of the sequence objects in the database. These maybe ids (display style) or accession numbers or something else completely different - they *are not* meaningful outside of this database implementation. Example : Returns : an array of strings Args : none
get_Seq_by_primary_id¶
Title : get_Seq_by_primary_id Usage : $seq = $db->get_Seq_by_primary_id($primary_id_string); Function: Gets a Bio::Seq object by the primary id. The primary id in these cases has to come from $db->get_all_primary_ids. There is no other way to get (or guess) the primary_ids in a database. The other possibility is to get Bio::PrimarySeqI objects via the get_PrimarySeq_stream and the primary_id field on these objects are specified as the ids to use here. Returns : A Bio::Seq object Args : accession number (as a string) Throws : "acc does not exist" exception
2021-08-15 | perl v5.32.1 |