Hi,

There are some O'Reilly books on the topic of Perl and Bioinformatics
as well.  I haven't read them.

http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/begperlbio/
http://www.oreilly.com/catalog/mperlbio/

Cheers,
Mike


On 2/3/07, I BioKid <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,
Perl is the preffered language for basic bioinformatics programng, say
seqeuence (manipulation) and structure analysis is much more easier in perl
than in any other language. Now a days python is also  favoured by
computational biologists looking in to the sequence data.
We have lots of modules available from Bio* projects

http://bioperl.org
http://biopython.org

thats my 2 cents !!!
--
Shameer Khadar
Bioinformatician frm india
On 1/25/07, zentara <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Wed, 24 Jan 2007 14:45:42 -0600, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Kevin Viel)
> wrote:
>
> >chen li wrote:
> >> Hi all,
> >>
> >> It is off-topic but I just wonder if any one knows a
> >> website or books talking about reading/processing DNA
> >> sequences with C language.
> >
> >In short, no.  You have not provided much information, i.e. what kind of
> >sequences or the nature of the processing, but ABI.pm is available on
> >CPAN.  I have been writing a suite in SAS (sorry perl-people), to
> >compare a series of *.ab1 files to a reference sequence to look for
> >genetic variables.  That is simply accomplished in perl.  Visually
> >discrepancies is beyond me.
> >
> >Given the imminence of megabase and whole genome resequencing (3 billion
> >data points per subject X 3 bits minimum), you can bet that such a suite
> >will be the standard; noone is going to expect a technician to review
> >the data.
> >Kevin
>
> Hi, this is just a brainstorming idea, but PDL might have some
> usefullness here. It uses Fortran behind the scenes, to give
> c-like speed to storing and handling huge arrays of data, while
> using Perl as a front end to make things easier.
>
> Of course, it's all numbers at that level, so you would have to work
> out a scheme for converting back-and-forth, between the gene
> text strings and numbers.
>
> PDL is as fast as c, once it gets to the actual number crunching,
> and the data storage is very efficient as well.
>
> See:
> http://www.techfak.uni-bielefeld.de/bcd/Perl/Bio/welcome.html
>
>
>
>
> --
> I'm not really a human, but I play one on earth.
> http://zentara.net/japh.html
>
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>




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