comparison variant_effect_predictor/Bio/SeqAnalysisParserI.pm @ 0:1f6dce3d34e0

Uploaded
author mahtabm
date Thu, 11 Apr 2013 02:01:53 -0400
parents
children
comparison
equal deleted inserted replaced
-1:000000000000 0:1f6dce3d34e0
1 # $Id: SeqAnalysisParserI.pm,v 1.12 2002/12/01 00:05:19 jason Exp $
2 #
3 # BioPerl module for Bio::SeqAnalysisParserI
4 #
5 # Cared for by Jason Stajich <jason@bioperl.org>,
6 # and Hilmar Lapp <hlapp@gmx.net>
7 #
8 # Copyright Jason Stajich, Hilmar Lapp
9 #
10 # You may distribute this module under the same terms as perl itself
11
12 # POD documentation - main docs before the code
13
14 =head1 NAME
15
16 Bio::SeqAnalysisParserI - Sequence analysis output parser interface
17
18 =head1 SYNOPSIS
19
20 # get a SeqAnalysisParserI somehow, e.g. by
21 my $parser = Bio::Factory::SeqAnalysisParserFactory->get_parser(
22 '-input' => 'inputfile', '-method' => 'genscan');
23 while( my $feature = $parser->next_feature() ) {
24 print "Feature from ", $feature->start, " to ", $feature->end, "\n";
25 }
26
27 =head1 DESCRIPTION
28
29 SeqAnalysisParserI is a generic interface for describing sequence analysis
30 result parsers. Sequence analysis in this sense is a search for similarities
31 or the identification of features on the sequence, like a databank search or a
32 a gene prediction result.
33
34 The concept behind this interface is to have a generic interface in sequence
35 annotation pipelines (as used e.g. in high-throughput automated
36 sequence annotation). This interface enables plug-and-play for new analysis
37 methods and their corresponding parsers without the necessity for modifying
38 the core of the annotation pipeline. In this concept the annotation pipeline
39 has to rely on only a list of methods for which to process the results, and a
40 factory from which it can obtain the corresponding parser implementing this
41 interface.
42
43 See Bio::Factory::SeqAnalysisParserFactoryI and
44 Bio::Factory::SeqAnalysisParserFactory for interface and an implementation
45 of the corresponding factory.
46
47 =head1 FEEDBACK
48
49 =head2 Mailing Lists
50
51 User feedback is an integral part of the evolution of this
52 and other Bioperl modules. Send your comments and suggestions preferably
53 to one of the Bioperl mailing lists.
54 Your participation is much appreciated.
55
56 bioperl-l@bioperl.org - General discussion
57 http://bio.perl.org/MailList.html - About the mailing lists
58
59 =head2 Reporting Bugs
60
61 Report bugs to the Bioperl bug tracking system to help us keep track
62 the bugs and their resolution.
63 Bug reports can be submitted via email or the web:
64
65 bioperl-bugs@bio.perl.org
66 http://bugzilla.bioperl.org/
67
68 =head1 AUTHOR - Hilmar Lapp, Jason Stajich
69
70 Email Hilmar Lapp E<lt>hlapp@gmx.netE<gt>, Jason Stajich E<lt>jason@bioperl.orgE<gt>
71
72 =head1 APPENDIX
73
74 The rest of the documentation details each of the object methods.
75 Internal methods are usually preceded with a _
76
77 =cut
78
79 package Bio::SeqAnalysisParserI;
80 use strict;
81 use vars qw(@ISA);
82 use Bio::Root::RootI;
83 use Carp;
84 @ISA = qw(Bio::Root::RootI);
85
86 =head2 next_feature
87
88 Title : next_feature
89 Usage : $seqfeature = $obj->next_feature();
90 Function: Returns the next feature available in the analysis result, or
91 undef if there are no more features.
92 Example :
93 Returns : A Bio::SeqFeatureI implementing object, or undef if there are no
94 more features.
95 Args : none
96
97 =cut
98
99 sub next_feature {
100 my ($self) = shift;
101 $self->throw_not_implemented();
102 }
103
104 1;