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Bio::Annotation::TagTrUser)Contributed Perl DocumenBio::Annotation::TagTree(3)

NAME
       Bio::Annotation::TagTree - AnnotationI with tree-like hierarchal
       key-value relationships ('structured tags') that can be represented as
       simple text.

SYNOPSIS
	  use Bio::Annotation::TagTree;
	  use Bio::Annotation::Collection;

	  my $col = Bio::Annotation::Collection->new();

	  # data structure can be an array reference with a data structure
	  # corresponding to that defined by Data::Stag:

	  my $sv = Bio::Annotation::TagTree->new(-tagname => 'mytag1',
						 -value => $data_structure);
	  $col->add_Annotation($sv);

	  # regular text passed is parsed based on the tagformat().
	  my $sv2 = Bio::Annotation::TagTree->new(-tagname => 'mytag2',
						 -tagformat => 'xml',
						 -value => $xmltext);
	  $col->add_Annotation($sv2);

DESCRIPTION
       This takes tagged data values and stores them in a hierarchal
       structured element-value hierarchy (complements of Chris Mungall's
       Data::Stag module). Data can then be represented as text using a
       variety of output formats (indention, itext, xml, spxr). Furthermore,
       the data structure can be queried using various means. See Data::Stag
       for details.

       Data passed in using value() or the '-value' parameter upon
       instantiation can either be:

       1) an array reference corresponding to the data structure for
       Data::Stag;

       2) a text string in 'xml', 'itext', 'spxr', or 'indent' format. The
       default format is 'xml'; this can be changed using tagformat() prior to
       using value() or by passing in the proper format using '-tagformat'
       upon instantiation;

       3) another Bio::Annotation::TagTree or Data::Stag node instance.	 In
       both cases a deep copy (duplicate) of the instance is generated.

       Beyond checking for an array reference no format guessing occurs (so,
       for roundtrip tests ensure that the IO formats correspond). For now, we
       recommend when using text input to set tagformat() to one of these
       formats prior to data loading to ensure the proper Data::Stag parser is
       selected. After data loading, the tagformat() can be changed to change
       the text string format returned by value(). (this may be rectified in
       the future)

       This Annotation type is fully BioSQL compatible and could be considered
       a temporary replacement for nested Bio::Annotation::Collections, at
       least until BioSQL and bioperl-db can support nested annotation
       collections.

FEEDBACK
   Mailing Lists
       User feedback is an integral part of the evolution of this and other
       Bioperl modules. Send your comments and suggestions preferably to one
       of the Bioperl mailing lists. Your participation is much appreciated.

	 bioperl-l@bioperl.org			- General discussion
	 http://bioperl.org/wiki/Mailing_lists	- About the mailing lists

   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 or the
       web:

	 http://bugzilla.open-bio.org/

AUTHOR
       Chris Fields

APPENDIX
       The rest of the documentation details each of the object methods.
       Internal methods are usually preceded with a _

   new
	Title	: new
	Usage	: my $sv = Bio::Annotation::TagTree->new();
	Function: Instantiate a new TagTree object
	Returns : Bio::Annotation::TagTree object
	Args	: -value => $value to initialize the object data field [optional]
		  -tagname => $tag to initialize the tagname [optional]
		  -tagformat => format for output [optional]
			     (types 'xml', 'itext', 'sxpr', 'indent', default = 'itext')
		  -node => Data::Stag node or Bio::Annotation::TagTree instance

AnnotationI implementing functions
   as_text
	Title	: as_text
	Usage	: my $text = $obj->as_text
	Function: return the string "Value: $v" where $v is the value
	Returns : string
	Args	: none

   display_text
	Title	: display_text
	Usage	: my $str = $ann->display_text();
	Function: returns a string. Unlike as_text(), this method returns a string
		  formatted as would be expected for the specific implementation.

		  One can pass a callback as an argument which allows custom text
		  generation; the callback is passed the current instance and any text
		  returned
	Example :
	Returns : a string
	Args	: [optional] callback

   hash_tree
	Title	: hash_tree
	Usage	: my $hashtree = $value->hash_tree
	Function: For supporting the AnnotationI interface just returns the value
		  as a hashref with the key 'value' pointing to the value
		  Maybe reimplement using Data::Stag::hash()?
	Returns : hashrf
	Args	: none

   tagname
	Title	: tagname
	Usage	: $obj->tagname($newval)
	Function: Get/set the tagname for this annotation value.

		  Setting this is optional. If set, it obviates the need to provide
		  a tag to AnnotationCollection when adding this object.
	Example :
	Returns : value of tagname (a scalar)
	Args	: new value (a scalar, optional)

Specific accessors for TagTree
   value
	Title	: value
	Usage	: $obj->value($newval)
	Function: Get/set the value for this annotation.
	Returns : value of value
	Args	: newvalue (optional)

   tagformat
	Title	: tagformat
	Usage	: $obj->tagformat($newval)
	Function: Get/set the output tag format for this annotation.
	Returns : value of tagformat
	Args	: newvalue (optional) - format for the data passed into value
		  must be of values 'xml', 'indent', 'sxpr', 'itext', 'perl'

   node
	Title	: node
	Usage	: $obj->node()
	Function: Get/set the topmost Data::Stag node used for this annotation.
	Returns : Data::Stag node implementation
		  (default is Data::Stag::StagImpl)
	Args	: (optional) Data::Stag node implementation
		  (optional)'copy' => flag to create a copy of the node

   Data::Stag convenience methods
       Because Data::Stag uses blessed arrays and the core Bioperl class uses
       blessed hashes, TagTree uses an internal instance of a Data::Stag node
       for data storage.  Therefore the following methods actually delegate to
       the Data:::Stag internal instance.

       For consistency (since one could recursively check child nodes),
       methods retain the same names as Data::Stag. Also, no 'magic'
       (AUTOLOAD'ed) methods are employed, simply b/c full-fledged Data::Stag
       functionality can be attained by grabbing the Data::Stag instance using
       node().

   element
	Title	: element
	Usage	:
	Function: Returns the element name (key name) for this node
	Example :
	Returns : scalar
	Args	: none

   data
	Title	: data
	Usage	:
	Function: Returns the data structure (array ref) for this node
	Example :
	Returns : array ref
	Args	: none

   children
	Title	: children
	Usage	:
	Function: Get the top-level array of Data::Stag nodes or (if the top level is
		  a terminal node) a scalar value.

		  This is similar to StructuredValue's get_values() method, with the
		  key difference being instead of array refs and scalars you get either
		  Data::Stag nodes or the value for this particular node.

		  For consistency (since one could recursively check nodes),
		  we use the same method name as Data::Stag children().
	Example :
	Returns : an array
	Args	: none

   subnodes
	Title	: subnodes
	Usage	:
	Function: Get the top-level array of Data::Stag nodes.	Unlike children(),
		  this only returns an array of nodes (if this is a terminal node,
		  no value is returned)
	Example :
	Returns : an array of nodes
	Args	: none

   get
	Title	: get
	Usage	:
	Function: Returns the nodes or value for the named element or path
	Example :
	Returns : returns array of nodes or a scalar (if node is terminal)
		  dependent on wantarray
	Args	: none

   find
	Title	: find
	Usage	:
	Function: Recursively searches for and returns the nodes or values for the
		  named element or path
	Example :
	Returns : returns array of nodes or scalars (for terminal nodes)
	Args	: none

   findnode
	Title	: findnode
	Usage	:
	Function: Recursively searches for and returns a list of nodes
		  of the given element path
	Example :
	Returns : returns array of nodes
	Args	: none

   findval
	Title	: findval
	Usage	:
	Function:
	Example :
	Returns : returns array of nodes or values
	Args	: none

   addchild
	Title	: addchild
	Usage	: $struct->addchild(['name' => [['foo'=> 'bar1']]]);
	Function: add new child node to the current node.  One can pass in a node, TagTree,
		  or data structure; for instance, in the above, this would translate
		  to (in XML):

		  <name>
		    <foo>bar1</foo>
		  </name>

	Returns : node
	Args	: first arg = element name
		  all other args are added as tag-value pairs

   add
	Title	: add
	Usage	: $struct->add('foo', 'bar1', 'bar2', 'bar3');
	Function: add tag-value nodes to the current node.  In the above, this would
		  translate to (in XML):
		  <foo>bar1</foo>
		  <foo>bar2</foo>
		  <foo>bar3</foo>
	Returns :
	Args	: first arg = element name
		  all other args are added as tag-value pairs

   set
	Title	: set
	Usage	: $struct->set('foo','bar');
	Function: sets a single tag-value pair in the current node.  Note this
		  differs from add() in that this replaces any data already present
	Returns : node
	Args	: first arg = element name
		  all other args are added as tag-value pairs

   unset
	Title	: unset
	Usage	: $struct->unset('foo');
	Function: unsets all key-value pairs of the passed element from the
		  current node
	Returns : node
	Args	: element name

   free
	Title	: free
	Usage	: $struct->free
	Function: removes all data from the current node
	Returns :
	Args	:

   hash
	Title	: hash
	Usage	: $struct->hash;
	Function: turns the tag-value tree into a hash, all data values are array refs
	Returns : hash
	Args	: first arg = element name
		  all other args are added as tag-value pairs

   pairs
	Title	: pairs
	Usage	: $struct->pairs;
	Function: turns the tag-value tree into a hash, all data values are scalar
	Returns : hash
	Args	: first arg = element name
		  all other args are added as tag-value pairs, note that duplicates
		  will be lost

   qmatch
	Title	 : qmatch
	Usage	 : @persons = $s->qmatch('person', ('name'=>'fred'));
	Function : returns all elements in the node tree which match the
		   element name and the key-value pair
	Returns	 : Array of nodes
	Args	 : return-element str, match-element str, match-value str

   tnodes
	Title	 : tnodes
	Usage	 : @termini = $s->tnodes;
	Function : returns all terminal nodes below this node
	Returns	 : Array of nodes
	Args	 : return-element str, match-element str, match-value str

   ntnodes
	Title	 : ntnodes
	Usage	 : @termini = $s->ntnodes;
	Function : returns all nonterminal nodes below this node
	Returns	 : Array of nodes
	Args	 : return-element str, match-element str, match-value str

   StructureValue-like methods
   get_all_values
	Title	 : get_all_values
	Usage	 : @termini = $s->get_all_values;
	Function : returns all terminal node values
	Returns	 : Array of values
	Args	 : return-element str, match-element str, match-value str

       This is meant to emulate the values one would get from StructureValue's
       get_all_values() method. Note, however, using this method dissociates
       the tag-value relationship (i.e. you only get the value list, no
       elements)

perl v5.14.1			  2011-07-22	   Bio::Annotation::TagTree(3)
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