github.com - The Charm City Circleator--or Circleator for short--is a Perl-based visualization tool developed at the Institute for Genome Sciences in the University of Maryland's School of Medicine. Circleator produces circular plots of...
github.com - RestrictionDigest can simulate the reference genome digestion and generate comprehensive information of the simulation. It can simulate single-enzyme digestion, double-enzyme digestion and size selection process. It can also analyze multiple genomes...
The benchmark module is a great tool to know the time the code takes to run. The output is usually in terms of CPU time. This module provides us with a way to optimize our code. With the advent of petascale computing and other multicore processor it...
https://www.uksh.de/jobs/Stellenangebote-nr-20190570-p-8.html
Your profile:
Degree in bioinformatics, biostatistics, or equivalent
Experience in the processing and analysis of large-scale genomics data using compute clusters / high-performance...
A curated list of awesome Perl frameworks, libraries and software.
major/MySQLTuner-perl - MySQLTuner is a script written in Perl that will assist you with your MySQL configuration and make recommendations for increased performance and...
https://perlbrew.pl/ - perlbrew is an admin-free perl installation management tool. The latest version is 0.79, read the release note: Release 0.79.
Copy & Paste this line into your terminal:
\curl -L https://install.perlbrew.pl | bash
Or, if your...
github.com - TwinBLAST is a web-based tool for viewing 2 BLAST reports simultaneouslyside-by-side. It uses ExtJS (www.sencha.com/products/extjs/) to provide 2independently scrollable panels. BioPerl (www.bioperl.org) is used to indexraw BLAST reports and...
What are the difference between BioRuby and BioGem?
readthedocs.org - Bipype is a very useful program, which prepare a lot of types of bioinformatics analyses. There are three input options: amplicons, WGS (whole genome sequences) and metatranscriptomic data. If amplicons are input data, then bipype does...