I can understand a bench scientist wanting FASTA but a computational biologist. They should be ashamed! With some of the friendly XPath implementations in common scripting languages there really is no excuse. It's easier to parse XML than FASTA in Groovy, Perl, Python and Ruby. Probably Java and C as well.
The state of bioinformatics data formats is cringe worthy. Let's try and enter the 21st century! OK I'm ranting again. Maybe I'll go join twitter. - Mark On 29 Apr 2009, 10:04 PM, "Josh Goodman" <[email protected]> wrote: Hi Mark, I couldn't agree with you more, which is why we also provide this data in GFF and Chado XML formats, Chado PostgreSQL dumps, and a public read only Chado database. However, no matter how much we try to encourage use of the other formats users still flock to the good old FASTA files. There are a variety of reasons but the most common case involves bench scientists and/or programmers who run at the sight of anything more complex than a FASTA file. I've toyed with the idea of reducing the data we cram into the headers to gently try to encourage use of the other more sensible formats. However, at the end of the day we (FlyBase) serve at the behest of our user community and this is what they want to see. Cheers, Josh On Wed, 29 Apr 2009, Mark Schreiber wrote: > People who know me will know I am not a big fan of F... _______________________________________________ Biojava-l mailing list - [email protected] http://lists.open-bio.org/mailman/listinfo/biojava-l
