Mercurial > repos > bgruening > text_processing
view sort.xml @ 8:fa7f88da29d7 draft
planemo upload for repository https://github.com/bgruening/galaxytools/tree/master/tools/text_processing/text_processing commit 369e40078146d00608d52205bb8cee66ae735b76-dirty
author | bgruening |
---|---|
date | Tue, 30 Jun 2015 16:20:05 -0400 |
parents | d64eace4f9f3 |
children | c78b1767db2b |
line wrap: on
line source
<tool id="tp_sort_header_tool" name="Sort" version="@BASE_VERSION@.0"> <description>data in ascending or descending order</description> <macros> <import>macros.xml</import> </macros> <expand macro="requirements"> <requirement type="package" version="4.2.2-sandbox">gnu_sed</requirement> </expand> <version_command>sort --version | head -n 1</version_command> <command> <![CDATA[ ( LC_ALL=C #if int($header) > 0: sed -u '${header}'q && #end if sort $unique $ignore_case --stable -t ' ' #for $key in $sortkeys: -k '${key.column}${key.order}${key.style},${key.column}' #end for ) < '${infile}' > '${outfile}' ]]> </command> <inputs> <param format="tabular" name="infile" type="data" label="Sort Query" /> <param name="header" type="integer" size="5" value="0" label="Number of header lines" help="These will be ignored during sort."> <validator type="in_range" message="Negative values are not allowed." min="0"/> </param> <repeat name="sortkeys" title="Column selections" min="1"> <param name="column" label="on column" type="data_column" data_ref="infile" accept_default="true" /> <param name="order" type="select" display="radio" label="in"> <option value="">Ascending order</option> <option value="r">Descending order</option> </param> <param name="style" type="select" display="radio" label="Flavor"> <option value="n">Fast numeric sort (-n)</option> <option value="g">General numeric sort ( scientific notation -g)</option> <option value="V">Natural/Version sort (-V) </option> <option value="">Alphabetical sort</option> <option value="h">Human-readable numbers (-h)</option> <option value="R">Random order (-R)</option> </param> </repeat> <param name="unique" type="boolean" checked="false" truevalue="--unique" falsevalue="" label="Output unique values" help="Print only unique values, based on sorted key columns. See help section for details. (--unique)" /> <param name="ignore_case" type="boolean" checked="false" truevalue="-i" falsevalue="" label="Ignore case" help="Sort and Join key column values regardless of upper/lower case letters. (-i)" /> </inputs> <outputs> <data name="outfile" format_source="infile" metadata_source="infile"/> </outputs> <tests> <test> <param name="infile" value="sort1.bed"/> <param name="header" value="3"/> <repeat name="sortkeys"> <param name="column" value="1"/> <param name="style" value=""/> <param name="order" value=""/> </repeat> <repeat name="sortkeys"> <param name="column" value="3"/> <param name="style" value="n"/> <param name="order" value="r"/> </repeat> <output name="outfile" file="sort_result1.bed"/> </test> <test> <param name="infile" value="sort1.bed"/> <param name="header" value="3"/> <repeat name="sortkeys"> <param name="column" value="1"/> <param name="style" value=""/> <param name="order" value=""/> </repeat> <repeat name="sortkeys"> <param name="column" value="3"/> <param name="style" value="n"/> <param name="order" value=""/> </repeat> <output name="outfile" file="sort_result2.bed"/> </test> <test> <param name="infile" value="sort2.bed"/> <repeat name="sortkeys"> <param name="column" value="5"/> <param name="style" value="g"/> <param name="order" value=""/> </repeat> <output name="outfile" file="sort_result3.bed"/> </test> </tests> <help> <![CDATA[ **What it does** This tool sorts an input file. ----- **Sorting Styles** * **Fast Numeric**: sort by numeric values. Handles integer values (e.g. 43, 134) and decimal-point values (e.g. 3.14). *Does not* handle scientific notation (e.g. -2.32e2). * **General Numeric**: sort by numeric values. Handles all numeric notations (including scientific notation). Slower than *fast numeric*, so use only when necessary. * **Natural Sort**: Sort in 'natural' order (natural to humans, not to computers). See example below. * **Alphabetical sort**: Sort in strict alphabetical order. See example below. * **Human-readable numbers**: Sort human readble numbers (e.g. 1G > 2M > 3K > 400) * **Random order**: return lines in random order. ------ **Example - Header line** **Input file** (note first line is a header line, should not be sorted):: Fruit Color Price Banana Yellow 4.1 Avocado Green 8.0 Apple Red 3.0 Melon Green 6.1 **Sorting** by **numeric order** on column **3**, with **header**, will return:: Fruit Color Price Apple Red 3.0 Banana Yellow 4.1 Melon Green 6.1 Avocado Green 8.0 ----- **Example - Natural vs. Alphabetical sorting** Given the following list:: chr4 chr13 chr1 chr10 chr20 chr2 **Alphabetical sort** would produce the following sorted list:: chr1 chr10 chr13 chr2 chr20 chr4 **Natural Sort** would produce the following sorted list:: chr1 chr2 chr4 chr10 chr13 chr20 .. class:: infomark If you're planning to use the file with another tool that expected sorted files (such as *join*), you should use the **Alphabetical sort**, not the **Natural Sort**. Natural sort order is easier for humans, but is unnatural for computer programs. @REFERENCES@ ]]> </help> </tool>