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Bio::Root::Utilities(3User Contributed Perl DocumentatiBio::Root::Utilities(3)

NAME
       Bio::Root::Utilities - General-purpose utility module

SYNOPSIS
   Object Creation
	   # Using the supplied singleton object:
	   use Bio::Root::Utilities qw(:obj);
	   $Util->some_method();

	   # Create an object manually:
	   use Bio::Root::Utilities;
	   my $util = Bio::Root::Utilities->new();
	   $util->some_method();

	   $date_stamp = $Util->date_format('yyy-mm-dd');

	   $clean = $Util->untaint($dirty);

	   $compressed = $Util->compress('/home/me/myfile.txt')

	   my ($mean, $stdev) = $Util->mean_stdev( @data );

	   $Util->authority("me@example.com");
	   $Util->mail_authority("Something you should know about...");

	   ...and a host of other methods. See below.

DESCRIPTION
       Provides general-purpose utilities of potential interest to any Perl
       script.

       The ":obj" tag is a convenience that imports a $Util symbol into your
       namespace representing a Bio::Root::Utilities object. This saves you
       from creating your own Bio::Root::Utilities object via
       "Bio::Root::Utilities->new()" or from prefixing all method calls with
       "Bio::Root::Utilities", though feel free to do these things if desired.
       Since there should normally not be a need for a script to have more
       than one Bio::Root::Utilities object, this module thus comes with it's
       own singleton.

INSTALLATION
       This module is included with the central Bioperl distribution:

	  http://www.bioperl.org/wiki/Getting_BioPerl
	  ftp://bio.perl.org/pub/DIST

       Follow the installation instructions included in the README file.

DEPENDENCIES
       Inherits from Bio::Root::Root, and uses Bio::Root::IO and
       Bio::Root::Exception.

       Relies on external executables for file compression/uncompression and
       sending mail. No paths to these are hard coded but are located as
       needed.

SEE ALSO
	 http://bioperl.org  - Bioperl Project Homepage

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 the
       web:

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

AUTHOR
       Steve Chervitz <sac@bioperl.org>

       See the FEEDBACK section	 for where to send bug reports and comments.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
       This module was originally developed under the auspices of the
       Saccharomyces Genome Database: http://www.yeastgenome.org/

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (c) 1996-2007 Steve Chervitz. All Rights Reserved.  This
       module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
       the same terms as Perl itself.

APPENDIX
       Methods beginning with a leading underscore are considered private and
       are intended for internal use by this module. They are not considered
       part of the public interface and are described here for documentation
       purposes only.

   date_format
	Title	  : date_format
	Usage	  : $Util->date_format( [FMT], [DATE])
	Purpose	  : -- Get a string containing the formated date or time
		  :    taken when this routine is invoked.
		  : -- Provides a way to avoid using `date`.
		  : -- Provides an interface to localtime().
		  : -- Interconverts some date formats.
		  :
		  : (For additional functionality, use Date::Manip or
		  :  Date::DateCalc available from CPAN).
	Example	  : $Util->date_format();
		  : $date = $Util->date_format('yyyy-mmm-dd', '11/22/92');
	Returns	  : String (unless 'list' is provided as argument, see below)
		  :
		  :   'yyyy-mm-dd'  = 1996-05-03    # default format.
		  :   'yyyy-dd-mm'  = 1996-03-05
		  :   'yyyy-mmm-dd' = 1996-May-03
		  :   'd-m-y'	    = 3-May-1996
		  :   'd m y'	    = 3 May 1996
		  :   'dmy'	    = 3may96
		  :   'mdy'	    = May 3, 1996
		  :   'ymd'	    = 96may3
		  :   'md'	    = may3
		  :   'year'	    = 1996
		  :   'hms'	    = 23:01:59	# when not converting a format, 'hms' can be
		  :				# tacked on to any of the above options
		  :				# to add the time stamp: eg 'dmyhms'
		  :   'full' | 'unix' = UNIX-style date: Tue May  5 22:00:00 1998
		  :   'list'	      = the contents of localtime(time) in an array.
	Argument  : (all are optional)
		  : FMT	 = yyyy-mm-dd | yyyy-dd-mm | yyyy-mmm-dd |
		  :	   mdy | ymd | md | d-m-y | hms | hm
		  :	   ('hms' may be appended to any of these to
		  :	   add a time stamp)
		  :
		  : DATE = String containing date to be converted.
		  :	   Acceptable input formats:
		  :	      12/1/97 (for 1 December 1997)
		  :	      1997-12-01
		  :	      1997-Dec-01
	Throws	  :
	Comments  : If you don't care about formatting or using backticks, you can
		  : always use: $date = `date`;
		  :
		  : For more features, use Date::Manip.pm, (which I should
		  : probably switch to...)

       See Also	  : file_date(), month2num()

   month2num
	Title	   : month2num
	Purpose	   : Converts a string containing a name of a month to integer
		   : representing the number of the month in the year.
	Example	   : $Util->month2num("march");	 # returns 3
	Argument   : The string argument must contain at least the first
		   : three characters of the month's name. Case insensitive.
	Throws	   : Exception if the conversion fails.

   num2month
	Title	: num2month
	Purpose : Does the opposite of month2num.
		: Converts a number into a string containing a name of a month.
	Example : $Util->num2month(3);	# returns 'Mar'
	Throws	: Exception if supplied number is out of range.

   compress
	Title	  : compress
	Usage	  : $Util->compress(full-path-filename);
		  : $Util->compress(<named parameters>);
	Purpose	  : Compress a file.
	Example	  : $Util->compress("/usr/people/me/data.txt");
		  : $Util->compress(-file=>"/usr/people/me/data.txt",
		  :		    -tmp=>1,
		  :		    -outfile=>"/usr/people/share/data.txt.gz",
		  :		    -exe=>"/usr/local/bin/fancyzip");
	Returns	  : String containing full, absolute path to compressed file
	Argument  : Named parameters (case-insensitive):
		  :   -FILE => String (name of file to be compressed, full path).
		  :	       If the supplied filename ends with '.gz' or '.Z',
		  :	       that extension will be removed before attempting to compress.
		  : Optional:
		  :   -TMP  => boolean. If true, (or if user is not the owner of the file)
		  :	       the file is compressed to a temp file. If false, file may be
		  :	       clobbered with the compressed version (if using a utility like
		  :	       gzip, which is the default)
		  :   -OUTFILE => String (name of the output compressed file, full path).
		  :   -EXE  => Name of executable for compression utility to use.
		  :	       Will supercede those in @COMPRESSION_UTILS defined by
		  :	       this module. If the absolute path to the executable is not provided,
		  :	       it will be searched in the PATH env variable.
	Throws	  : Exception if file cannot be compressed.
		  : If user is not owner of the file, generates a warning and compresses to
		  : a tmp file. To avoid this warning, use the -o file test operator
		  : and call this function with -TMP=>1.
	Comments  : Attempts to compress using utilities defined in the @COMPRESSION_UTILS
		  : defined by this module, in the order defined. The first utility that is
		  : found to be executable will be used. Any utility defined in optional -EXE param
		  : will be tested for executability first.
		  : To minimize security risks, the -EXE parameter value is untained using
		  : the untaint() method of this module (in 'relaxed' mode to permit path separators).

       See Also	  : uncompress()

   uncompress
	Title	  : uncompress
	Usage	  : $Util->uncompress(full-path-filename);
		  : $Util->uncompress(<named parameters>);
	Purpose	  : Uncompress a file.
	Example	  : $Util->uncompress("/usr/people/me/data.txt");
		  : $Util->uncompress(-file=>"/usr/people/me/data.txt.gz",
		  :		      -tmp=>1,
		  :		      -outfile=>"/usr/people/share/data.txt",
		  :		      -exe=>"/usr/local/bin/fancyzip");
	Returns	  : String containing full, absolute path to uncompressed file
	Argument  : Named parameters (case-insensitive):
		  :   -FILE => String (name of file to be uncompressed, full path).
		  :	       If the supplied filename ends with '.gz' or '.Z',
		  :	       that extension will be removed before attempting to uncompress.
		  : Optional:
		  :   -TMP  => boolean. If true, (or if user is not the owner of the file)
		  :	       the file is uncompressed to a temp file. If false, file may be
		  :	       clobbered with the uncompressed version (if using a utility like
		  :	       gzip, which is the default)
		  :   -OUTFILE => String (name of the output uncompressed file, full path).
		  :   -EXE  => Name of executable for uncompression utility to use.
		  :	       Will supercede those in @UNCOMPRESSION_UTILS defined by
		  :	       this module. If the absolute path to the executable is not provided,
		  :	       it will be searched in the PATH env variable.
	Throws	  : Exception if file cannot be uncompressed.
		  : If user is not owner of the file, generates a warning and uncompresses to
		  : a tmp file. To avoid this warning, use the -o file test operator
		  : and call this function with -TMP=>1.
	Comments  : Attempts to uncompress using utilities defined in the @UNCOMPRESSION_UTILS
		  : defined by this module, in the order defined. The first utility that is
		  : found to be executable will be used. Any utility defined in optional -EXE param
		  : will be tested for executability first.
		  : To minimize security risks, the -EXE parameter value is untained using
		  : the untaint() method of this module (in 'relaxed' mode to permit path separators).

       See Also	  : compress()

   file_date
	Title	 : file_date
	Usage	 : $Util->file_date( filename [,date_format])
	Purpose	 : Obtains the date of a given file.
		 : Provides flexible formatting via date_format().
	Returns	 : String = date of the file as: yyyy-mm-dd (e.g., 1997-10-15)
	Argument : filename = string, full path name for file
		 : date_format = string, desired format for date (see date_format()).
		 :		 Default = yyyy-mm-dd
	Thows	 : Exception if no file is provided or does not exist.
	Comments : Uses the mtime field as obtained by stat().

   untaint
	Title	: untaint
	Purpose : To remove nasty shell characters from untrusted data
		: and allow a script to run with the -T switch.
		: Potentially dangerous shell meta characters:	&;`'\"|*?!~<>^()[]{}$\n\r
		: Accept only the first block of contiguous characters:
		:  Default allowed chars = "-\w.', ()"
		:  If $relax is true  = "-\w.', ()\/=%:^<>*"
	Usage	: $Util->untaint($value, $relax)
	Returns : String containing the untained data.
	Argument: $value = string
		: $relax = boolean
	Comments:
	    This general untaint() function may not be appropriate for every situation.
	    To allow only a more restricted subset of special characters
	    (for example, untainting a regular expression), then using a custom
	    untainting mechanism would permit more control.

	    Note that special trusted vars (like $0) require untainting.

   mean_stdev
	Title	 : mean_stdev
	Usage	 : ($mean, $stdev) = $Util->mean_stdev( @data )
	Purpose	 : Calculates the mean and standard deviation given a list of numbers.
	Returns	 : 2-element list (mean, stdev)
	Argument : list of numbers (ints or floats)
	Thows	 : n/a

   count_files
	Title	 : count_files
	Purpose	 : Counts the number of files/directories within a given directory.
		 : Also reports the number of text and binary files in the dir
		 : as well as names of these files and directories.
	Usage	 : count_files(\%data)
		 :   $data{-DIR} is the directory to be analyzed. Default is ./
		 :   $data{-PRINT} = 0|1; if 1, prints results to STDOUT, (default=0).
	Argument : Hash reference (empty)
	Returns	 : n/a;
		 : Modifies the hash ref passed in as the sole argument.
		 :  $$href{-TOTAL}	      scalar
		 :  $$href{-NUM_TEXT_FILES}   scalar
		 :  $$href{-NUM_BINARY_FILES} scalar
		 :  $$href{-NUM_DIRS}	      scalar
		 :  $$href{-T_FILE_NAMES}     array ref
		 :  $$href{-B_FILE_NAMES}     array ref
		 :  $$href{-DIRNAMES}	      array ref

   create_filehandle
	Usage	  : $object->create_filehandle(<named parameters>);
	Purpose	  : Create a FileHandle object from a file or STDIN.
		  : Mainly used as a helper method by read() and get_newline().
	Example	  : $data = $object->create_filehandle(-FILE =>'usr/people/me/data.txt')
	Argument  : Named parameters (case-insensitive):
		  :  (all optional)
		  :    -CLIENT	=> object reference for the object submitting
		  :		   the request. Default = $Util.
		  :    -FILE	=> string (full path to file) or a reference
		  :		   to a FileHandle object or typeglob. This is an
		  :		   optional parameter (if not defined, STDIN is used).
	Returns	  : Reference to a FileHandle object.
	Throws	  : Exception if cannot open a supplied file or if supplied with a
		  : reference that is not a FileHandle ref.
	Comments  : If given a FileHandle reference, this method simply returns it.
		  : This method assumes the user wants to read ascii data. So, if
		  : the file is binary, it will be treated as a compressed (gzipped)
		  : file and access it using gzip -ce. The problem here is that not
		  : all binary files are necessarily compressed. Therefore,
		  : this method should probably have a -mode parameter to
		  : specify ascii or binary.

       See Also :  get_newline()

   get_newline
	Usage	  : $object->get_newline(<named parameters>);
	Purpose	  : Determine the character(s) used for newlines in a given file or
		  : input stream. Delegates to Bio::Root::Utilities::get_newline()
	Example	  : $data = $object->get_newline(-CLIENT => $anObj,
		  :				      -FILE =>'usr/people/me/data.txt')
	Argument  : Same arguemnts as for create_filehandle().
	Returns	  : Reference to a FileHandle object.
	Throws	  : Propogates any exceptions thrown by Bio::Root::Utilities::get_newline().

       See Also : taste_file(), create_filehandle()

   taste_file
	Usage	  : $object->taste_file( <FileHandle> );
		  : Mainly a utility method for get_newline().
	Purpose	  : Sample a filehandle to determine the character(s) used for a newline.
	Example	  : $char = $Util->taste_file($FH)
	Argument  : Reference to a FileHandle object.
	Returns	  : String containing an octal represenation of the newline character string.
		  :   Unix = "\012"  ("\n")
		  :   Win32 = "\012\015" ("\r\n")
		  :   Mac = "\015"  ("\r")
	Throws	  : Exception if no input is read within $TIMEOUT_SECS seconds.
		  : Exception if argument is not FileHandle object reference.
		  : Warning if cannot determine neewline char(s).
	Comments  : Based on code submitted by Vicki Brown (vlb@deltagen.com).

       See Also : get_newline()

   file_flavor
	Usage	  : $object->file_flavor( <filename> );
	Purpose	  : Returns the 'flavor' of a given file (unix, dos, mac)
	Example	  : print "$file has flavor: ", $Util->file_flavor($file);
	Argument  : filename = string, full path name for file
	Returns	  : String describing flavor of file and handy info about line endings.
		  : One of these is returned:
		  :   unix (\n or 012 or ^J)
		  :   dos (\r\n or 015,012 or ^M^J)
		  :   mac (\r or 015 or ^M)
		  :   unknown
	Throws	  : Exception if argument is not a file
		  : Propogates any exceptions thrown by Bio::Root::Utilities::get_newline().

       See Also : get_newline(),  taste_file()

   mail_authority
	Title	 : mail_authority
	Usage	 : $Util->mail_authority( $message )
	Purpose	 : Syntactic sugar to send email to $Bio::Root::Global::AUTHORITY

       See Also	 : send_mail()

   authority
	Title	 : authority
	Usage	 : $Util->authority('admin@example.com');
	Purpose	 : Set/get the email address that should be notified by mail_authority()

       See Also	 : mail_authority()

   send_mail
	Title	 : send_mail
	Usage	 : $Util->send_mail( named_parameters )
	Purpose	 : Provides an interface to mail or sendmail, if available
	Returns	 : n/a
	Argument : Named parameters:  (case-insensitive)
		 :  -TO	  => e-mail address to send to
		 :  -SUBJ => subject for message  (optional)
		 :  -MSG  => message to be sent	  (optional)
		 :  -CC	  => cc: e-mail address	  (optional)
	Thows	 : Exception if TO: address appears bad or is missing.
		 : Exception if mail cannot be sent.
	Comments : Based on  TomC's tip at:
		 :   http://www.perl.com/CPAN/doc/FMTEYEWTK/safe_shellings
		 :
		 : Using default 'From:' information.
		 :   sendmail options used:
		 :	-t: ignore the address given on the command line and
		 :	    get To:address from the e-mail header.
		 :     -oi: prevents send_mail from ending the message if it
		 :	    finds a period at the start of a line.

       See Also	 : mail_authority()

   find_exe
	Title	  : find_exe
	Usage	  : $Util->find_exe(name);
	Purpose	  : Locate an executable (for use in a system() call, e.g.))
	Example	  : $Util->find_exe("gzip");
	Returns	  : String containing executable that passes the -x test.
		    Returns undef if an executable of the supplied name cannot be found.
	Argument  : Name of executable to be found.
		  : Can be a full path. If supplied name is not executable, an executable
		  : of that name will be searched in all directories in the currently
		  : defined PATH environment variable.
	Throws	  : No exceptions, but issues a warning if multiple paths are found
		  : for a given name. The first one is used.
	Comments  : TODO: Confirm functionality on all bioperl-supported platforms.
		    May get tripped up by variation in path separator character used
		    for splitting ENV{PATH}.
       See Also	  :

   yes_reply
	Title	: yes_reply()
	Usage	: $Util->yes_reply( [query_string]);
	Purpose : To test an STDIN input value for affirmation.
	Example : print +( $Util->yes_reply('Are you ok') ? "great!\n" : "sorry.\n" );
		: $Util->yes_reply('Continue') || die;
	Returns : Boolean, true (1) if input string begins with 'y' or 'Y'
	Argument: query_string = string to be used to prompt user (optional)
		: If not provided, 'Yes or no' will be used.
		: Question mark is automatically appended.

   request_data
	Title	: request_data()
	Usage	: $Util->request_data( [value_name]);
	Purpose : To request data from a user to be entered via keyboard (STDIN).
	Example : $name = $Util->request_data('Name');
		: # User will see: % Enter Name:
	Returns : String, (data entered from keyboard, sans terminal newline.)
	Argument: value_name = string to be used to prompt user.
		: If not provided, 'data' will be used, (not very helpful).
		: Question mark is automatically appended.

   verify_version
	Purpose : Checks the version of Perl used to invoke the script.
		: Aborts program if version is less than the given argument.
	Usage	: verify_version('5.000')

perl v5.14.1			  2011-07-22	       Bio::Root::Utilities(3)
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