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Bio::Ontology::OntologUseriContributed Perl DBio::Ontology::OntologyEngineI(3)

NAME
       Bio::Ontology::OntologyEngineI - Interface a minimal Ontology
       implementation should satisfy

SYNOPSIS
	   # see documentation of methods

DESCRIPTION
       This describes the minimal interface an ontology query engine should
       provide.	 It intentionally does not make explicit references to the
       ontology being a DAG, nor does it mandate that the ontology be a
       vocabulary. Rather, it tries to generically express what should be
       accessible (queriable) about an ontology.

       The idea is to allow for different implementations for different
       purposes, which may then differ as to which operations are efficient
       and which are not, and how much richer the functionality is on top of
       this minimalistic set of methods. Check modules in the Bio::Ontology
       namespace to find out which implementations exist. At the time of
       writing, there is a SimpleOntologyEngine (which does not use Graph.pm),
       and a Graph.pm-based implementation in SimpleGOEngine.

       Ontology parsers in Bio::OntologyIO are required to return an
       implementation of this interface.

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 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

   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 of
       the bugs and their resolution. Bug reports can be submitted via the
       web:

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

AUTHOR - Peter Dimitrov
       Email dimitrov@gnf.org

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

   add_term
	Title	: add_term
	Usage	: add_term(TermI term): TermI
	Function: Adds TermI object to the ontology engine term store
	Example : $oe->add_term($term)
	Returns : its argument.
	Args	: object of class TermI.

   add_relationship
	Title	: add_relationship
	Usage	: add_relationship(RelationshipI relationship): RelationshipI
	Function: Adds a relationship object to the ontology engine.
	Example :
	Returns : Its argument.
	Args	: A RelationshipI object.

   add_relationship_type
	Title	: add_relationship_type
	Usage	: add_relationship_type(scalar,OntologyI ontology)
	Function: Adds a relationshiptype object to the ontology engine.
	Example :
	Returns : 1 on success, undef on failure
	Args	: The name(scalar) of the relationshiptype, and the OntologyI
		  it is to be added to.

   get_relationship_type
	Title	: get_relationship_type
	Usage	: get_relationship_type(scalar): RelationshipTypeI
	Function: Get a relationshiptype object from the ontology engine.
	Example :
	Returns : A RelationshipTypeI object.
	Args	: The name (scalar) of the RelationshipTypeI object desired.

   get_relationships
	Title	: get_relationships
	Usage	: get_relationships(TermI term): RelationshipI
	Function: Retrieves all relationship objects from this ontology engine,
		  or all relationships of a term if a term is supplied.
	Example :
	Returns : Array of Bio::Ontology::RelationshipI objects
	Args	: None, or a Bio::Ontology::TermI compliant object for which
		  to retrieve the relationships.

   get_predicate_terms
	Title	: get_predicate_terms
	Usage	: get_predicate_terms(): TermI
	Function:
	Example :
	Returns :
	Args	:

   get_child_terms
	Title	: get_child_terms
	Usage	: get_child_terms(TermI term, TermI predicate_terms): TermI
	Function: Retrieves all child terms of a given term, that satisfy a
		  relationship among those that are specified in the second
		  argument or undef otherwise. get_child_terms is a special
		  case of get_descendant_terms, limiting the search to the
		  direct descendants.

	Example :
	Returns : Array of TermI objects.
	Args	: First argument is the term of interest, second is the list
		  of relationship type terms.

   get_descendant_terms
	Title	: get_descendant_terms
	Usage	: get_descendant_terms(TermI term, TermI rel_types): TermI
	Function: Retrieves all descendant terms of a given term, that
		  satisfy a relationship among those that are specified in
		  the second argument or undef otherwise.
	Example :
	Returns : Array of TermI objects.
	Args	: First argument is the term of interest, second is the list
		  of relationship type terms.

   get_parent_terms
	Title	: get_parent_terms
	Usage	: get_parent_terms(TermI term, TermI predicate_terms): TermI
	Function: Retrieves all parent terms of a given term, that satisfy a
		  relationship among those that are specified in the second
		  argument or undef otherwise. get_parent_terms is a special
		  case of get_ancestor_terms, limiting the search to the
		  direct ancestors.

	Example :
	Returns : Array of TermI objects.
	Args	: First argument is the term of interest, second is the list
		  of relationship type terms.

   get_ancestor_terms
	Title	: get_ancestor_terms
	Usage	: get_ancestor_terms(TermI term, TermI predicate_terms): TermI
	Function: Retrieves all ancestor terms of a given term, that satisfy
		  a relationship among those that are specified in the second
		  argument or undef otherwise.

	Example :
	Returns : Array of TermI objects.
	Args	: First argument is the term of interest, second is the list
		  of relationship type terms.

   get_leaf_terms
	Title	: get_leaf_terms
	Usage	: get_leaf_terms(): TermI
	Function: Retrieves all leaf terms from the ontology. Leaf term is a
		  term w/o descendants.

	Example : @leaf_terms = $obj->get_leaf_terms()
	Returns : Array of TermI objects.
	Args	:

   get_root_terms
	Title	: get_root_terms
	Usage	: get_root_terms(): TermI
	Function: Retrieves all root terms from the ontology. Root term is a
		  term w/o ancestors.

	Example : @root_terms = $obj->get_root_terms()
	Returns : Array of TermI objects.
	Args	:

Factory for relationships and terms
   relationship_factory
	Title	: relationship_factory
	Usage	: $fact = $obj->relationship_factory()
	Function: Get (and set, if the implementation supports it) the object
		  factory to be used when relationship objects are created by
		  the implementation on-the-fly.

	Example :
	Returns : value of relationship_factory (a Bio::Factory::ObjectFactory
		  compliant object)
	Args	:

   term_factory
	Title	: term_factory
	Usage	: $fact = $obj->term_factory()
	Function: Get (and set, if the implementation supports it) the object
		  factory to be used when term objects are created by
		  the implementation on-the-fly.

	Example :
	Returns : value of term_factory (a Bio::Factory::ObjectFactory
		  compliant object)
	Args	:

Decorator Methods
	These methods come with a default implementation that uses the
	abstract methods defined for this interface. This may not be very
	efficient, and hence implementors are encouraged to override these
	methods if they can provide more efficient implementations.

   get_all_terms
	Title	: get_all_terms
	Usage	: get_all_terms: TermI
	Function: Retrieves all terms from the ontology.

		  This is more a decorator method. We provide a default
		  implementation here that loops over all root terms and gets
		  all descendants for each root term. The overall union of
		  terms is then made unique by name and ontology.

		  We do not mandate an order here in which the terms are
		  returned. In fact, the default implementation will return
		  them in unpredictable order.

		  Engine implementations that can provide a more efficient
		  method for obtaining all terms should definitely override
		  this.

	Example : @terms = $obj->get_all_terms()
	Returns : Array of TermI objects.
	Args	:

   find_terms
	Title	: find_terms
	Usage	: ($term) = $oe->find_terms(-identifier => "SO:0000263");
	Function: Find term instances matching queries for their attributes.

		  An implementation may not support querying for arbitrary
		  attributes, but can generally be expected to accept
		  -identifier and -name as queries. If both are provided,
		  they are implicitly intersected.

	Example :
	Returns : an array of zero or more Bio::Ontology::TermI objects
	Args	: Named parameters. The following parameters should be recognized
		  by any implementation:

		     -identifier    query by the given identifier
		     -name	    query by the given name

Experimental API method proposals
	Ontologies are a very new domain in bioperl, and we are not sure yet
	what we will want to do on and with ontologies in which
	situation. The methods from here on downwards are solely API
	descriptions to solicit comment and feedback; the chance of any of
	those being actually implemented already is very slim.

	Disclaimer: As long as an API method stays in this section, it is
	subject to change, possibly even radical change or complete
	deletion. If it's not implemented yet (most likely it isn't),
	implement yourself at your own risk.

	So far for the disclaimer. The reason the API description is here,
	however, is to solicit feedback. Please feel encouraged to share your
	opinion, regardless of what it is (a notable difference of this API
	method to others is that there is actually no working code behind it
	- so the defense line is non-existent for practical purposes).

   common_ancestor_path
	Title	: common_ancestor_path
	Usage	:
	Function: Get the paths from two terms A and B to term C, such that
		  there is no other term D to which A and B would have a shorter
		  path, provided there is a term C to which both A and B are
		  connected by a path.

		  Note that the path to the common ancestor between A and A
		  exists, has distance zero, and predicate "identity".

		  The search for the common ancestor C can be further
		  constrained by supplying a predicate term. If supplied, the
		  predicates of the two paths (A,C) and (B,C) must have a
		  common ancestor identical to the predicate, or that has a
		  path to the predicate.

	Example :
	Returns : The path of the first term to the common ancestor in scalar
		  context, and both paths in list context. Paths are
		  Bio::Ontology::PathI compliant objects.
	Args	: The two terms (Bio::Ontology::TermI objects), and optionally
		  a constraining common predicate (Bio::Ontology::TermI object).
		  The latter may also be given as a scalar, in which case it
		  is treated as a boolean that, if TRUE, means that the two paths
		  must have identical predicates in order to be returned.

perl v5.14.1			  2011-07-22 Bio::Ontology::OntologyEngineI(3)
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