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Bio::Das::SegmentI(3) User Contributed Perl DocumentationBio::Das::SegmentI(3)

NAME
       Bio::Das::SegmentI - DAS-style access to a feature database

SYNOPSIS
	 # Get a Bio::Das::SegmentI object from a Bio::DasI database...

	 $segment = $das->segment(-name=>'Landmark',
				  -start=>$start,
				  -end => $end);

	 @features = $segment->overlapping_features(-type=>['type1','type2']);
	 # each feature is a Bio::SeqFeatureI-compliant object

	 @features = $segment->contained_features(-type=>['type1','type2']);

	 @features = $segment->contained_in(-type=>['type1','type2']);

	 $stream = $segment->get_feature_stream(-type=>['type1','type2','type3'];
	 while (my $feature = $stream->next_seq) {
	    # do something with feature
	 }

	 $count = $segment->features_callback(-type=>['type1','type2','type3'],
					      -callback => sub { ... { }
					      );

DESCRIPTION
       Bio::Das::SegmentI is a simplified alternative interface to sequence
       annotation databases used by the distributed annotation system. In this
       scheme, the genome is represented as a series of landmarks.  Each
       Bio::Das::SegmentI object ("segment") corresponds to a genomic region
       defined by a landmark and a start and end position relative to that
       landmark.  A segment is created using the Bio::DasI segment() method.

       Features can be filtered by the following attributes:

	 1) their location relative to the segment (whether overlapping,
		 contained within, or completely containing)

	 2) their type

	 3) other attributes using tag/value semantics

       Access to the feature list uses three distinct APIs:

	 1) fetching entire list of features at a time

	 2) fetching an iterator across features

	 3) a callback

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@bio.perl.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:

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

AUTHOR - Lincoln Stein
       Email lstein@cshl.org

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

   seq_id
	Title	: seq_id
	Usage	: $ref = $s->seq_id
	Function: return the ID of the landmark
	Returns : a string
	Args	: none
	Status	: Public

   display_name
	Title	: seq_name
	Usage	: $ref = $s->seq_name
	Function: return the human-readable name for the landmark
	Returns : a string
	Args	: none
	Status	: Public

       This defaults to the same as seq_id.

   start
	Title	: start
	Usage	: $s->start
	Function: start of segment
	Returns : integer
	Args	: none
	Status	: Public

       This is a read-only accessor for the start of the segment.  Alias to
       low() for Gadfly compatibility.

   end
	Title	: end
	Usage	: $s->end
	Function: end of segment
	Returns : integer
	Args	: none
	Status	: Public

       This is a read-only accessor for the end of the segment. Alias to
       high() for Gadfly compatibility.

   length
	Title	: length
	Usage	: $s->length
	Function: length of segment
	Returns : integer
	Args	: none
	Status	: Public

       Returns the length of the segment.  Always a positive number.

   seq
	Title	: seq
	Usage	: $s->seq
	Function: get the sequence string for this segment
	Returns : a string
	Args	: none
	Status	: Public

       Returns the sequence for this segment as a simple string.

   ref
	Title	: ref
	Usage	: $ref = $s->ref([$newlandmark])
	Function: get/set the reference landmark for addressing
	Returns : a string
	Args	: none
	Status	: Public

       This method is used to examine/change the reference landmark used to
       establish the coordinate system.	 By default, the landmark cannot be
       changed and therefore this has the same effect as seq_id().  The new
       landmark might be an ID, or another Das::SegmentI object.

   absolute
	Title	: absolute
	Usage	: $s->absolute([$new_value])
	Function: get/set absolute addressing mode
	Returns : flag
	Args	: new flag (optional)
	Status	: Public

       Turn on and off absolute-addressing mode.  In absolute addressing mode,
       coordinates are relative to some underlying "top level" coordinate
       system (such as a chromosome). ref() returns the identity of the top
       level landmark, and start() and end() return locations relative to that
       landmark.  In relative addressing mode, coordinates are relative to the
       landmark sequence specified at the time of segment creation or later
       modified by the ref() method.

       The default is to return false and to do nothing in response to
       attempts to set absolute addressing mode.

   features
	Title	: features
	Usage	: @features = $s->features(@args)
	Function: get features that overlap this segment
	Returns : a list of Bio::SeqFeatureI objects
	Args	: see below
	Status	: Public

       This method will find all features that intersect the segment in a
       variety of ways and return a list of Bio::SeqFeatureI objects.  The
       feature locations will use coordinates relative to the reference
       sequence in effect at the time that features() was called.

       The returned list can be limited to certain types, attributes or range
       intersection modes.  Types of range intersection are one of:

	  "overlaps"	  the default
	  "contains"	  return features completely contained within the segment
	  "contained_in"  return features that completely contain the segment

       Two types of argument lists are accepted.  In the positional argument
       form, the arguments are treated as a list of feature types.  In the
       named parameter form, the arguments are a series of -name=>value pairs.

	 Argument    Description
	 --------   ------------

	 -types	     An array reference to type names in the format
		     "method:source"

	 -attributes A hashref containing a set of attributes to match

	 -rangetype  One of "overlaps", "contains", or "contained_in".

	 -iterator   Return an iterator across the features.

	 -callback   A callback to invoke on each feature

       The -attributes argument is a hashref containing one or more attributes
       to match against:

	 -attributes => { Gene => 'abc-1',
			  Note => 'confirmed' }

       Attribute matching is simple string matching, and multiple attributes
       are ANDed together.  More complex filtering can be performed using the
       -callback option (see below).

       If -iterator is true, then the method returns an object reference that
       implements the next_seq() method.  Each call to next_seq() returns a
       new Bio::SeqFeatureI object.

       If -callback is passed a code reference, the code reference will be
       invoked on each feature returned.  The code will be passed two
       arguments consisting of the current feature and the segment object
       itself, and must return a true value. If the code returns a false
       value, feature retrieval will be aborted.

       -callback and -iterator are mutually exclusive options.	If -iterator
       is defined, then -callback is ignored.

       NOTE: the following methods all build on top of features(), and do not
       need to be explicitly implemented.

	   overlapping_features()
	   contained_features()
	   contained_in()
	   get_feature_stream()

   overlapping_features
	Title	: overlapping_features
	Usage	: @features = $s->overlapping_features(@args)
	Function: get features that overlap this segment
	Returns : a list of Bio::SeqFeatureI objects
	Args	: see below
	Status	: Public

       This method is identical to features() except that it defaults to
       finding overlapping features.

   contained_features
	Title	: contained_features
	Usage	: @features = $s->contained_features(@args)
	Function: get features that are contained in this segment
	Returns : a list of Bio::SeqFeatureI objects
	Args	: see below
	Status	: Public

       This method is identical to features() except that it defaults to a
       range type of 'contained'.

   contained_in
	Title	: contained_in
	Usage	: @features = $s->contained_in(@args)
	Function: get features that contain this segment
	Returns : a list of Bio::SeqFeatureI objects
	Args	: see below
	Status	: Public

       This method is identical to features() except that it defaults to a
       range type of 'contained_in'.

   get_feature_stream
	Title	: get_feature_stream
	Usage	: $iterator = $s->get_feature_stream(@args)
	Function: get an iterator across the segment
	Returns : an object that implements next_seq()
	Args	: see below
	Status	: Public

       This method is identical to features() except that it always generates
       an iterator.

       NOTE: This is defined in the interface in terms of features().  You do
       not have to implement it.

   factory
	Title	: factory
	Usage	: $factory = $s->factory
	Function: return the segment factory
	Returns : a Bio::DasI object
	Args	: see below
	Status	: Public

       This method returns a Bio::DasI object that can be used to fetch more
       segments.  This is typically the Bio::DasI object from which the
       segment was originally generated.

   primary_tag
	Title	: primary_tag
	Usage	: $tag = $s->primary_tag
	Function: identifies the segment as type "DasSegment"
	Returns : a string named "DasSegment"
	Args	: none
	Status	: Public, but see below

       This method provides Bio::Das::Segment objects with a primary_tag()
       field that identifies them as being of type "DasSegment".  This allows
       the Bio::Graphics engine to render segments just like a feature in
       order nis way useful.

       This does not need to be implemented.  It is defined by the interface.

   strand
	Title	: strand
	Usage	: $strand = $s->strand
	Function: identifies the segment strand as 0
	Returns : the number 0
	Args	: none
	Status	: Public, but see below

       This method provides Bio::Das::Segment objects with a strand() field
       that identifies it as being strandless.	This allows the Bio::Graphics
       engine to render segments just like a feature in order nis way useful.

       This does not need to be implemented.  It is defined by the interface.

perl v5.14.1			  2011-07-22		 Bio::Das::SegmentI(3)
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