github.com - Perform Alignment-free k-tuple frequency comparisons from sequences. This can be in the form of two input files (e.g. a reference and a query) or a single file for pairwise comparisons to be made.
github.com - Just import the assembly, bam and ALE scores. You can convert the .ale file to a set of .wig files with ale2wiggle.py and IGV can read those directly. Depending on your genome size you may want to convert the .wig files to the BigWig format.
I'm new to bioinformatics and recently started learning Perl. I found several rival distributions available for Windows platform, which confuse me at the begining.
I google it and found that Strawberry comes with additional dev tools to compile...
Mostly FASTA file contain NNN characters, which can be replace by random A T G C character with this perl script. It also print the FASTA sequence name, N's counts, nucleotide count and percentage details at command prompt/standard output.
Question at http://rosalind.info/problems/1b/
#Find the reverse complement of a DNA string.#Given: A DNA string Pattern.#Return: Pattern, the reverse complement of Pattern.use strict;use warnings;my $string="AAAACCCGGT";my $finalString="";my %hash...
The question at http://rosalind.info/problems/1d/
Script are moved to http://bioinformaticsonline.com/snippets/view/34633/clump-finding-problem-solved-with-perl