Ace::Sequence::GappedAlignment(3) Gapped alignment object

SYNOPSIS


# open database connection and get an Ace::Sequence object
use Ace::Sequence;
# get a megabase from the middle of chromosome I
$seq = Ace::Sequence->new(-name => 'CHROMOSOME_I,
-db => $db,
-offset => 3_000_000,
-length => 1_000_000);
# get all the gapped alignments
@alignments = $seq->alignments('EST_GENOME');
# get the aligned segments from the first one
@segs = $alignments[0]->segments;
# get the position of the first aligned segment on the
# source sequence:
($s_start,$s_end) = ($segs[0]->start,$segs[0]->end);
# get the target position for the first aligned segment
($t_start,$t_end) = ($segs[0]->target->start,$segs[0]->target->end);

DESCRIPTION

Ace::Sequence::GappedAlignment is a subclass of Ace::Sequence::Feature. It inherits all the methods of Ace::Sequence::Feature, but adds the ability to retrieve the positions of the aligned segments. Each segment is an Ace::Sequence::Feature, from which you can retrieve the source and target coordinates.

OBJECT CREATION

You will not ordinarily create an Ace::Sequence::GappedAlignment object directly. Instead, objects will be created in response to a alignments() call to an Ace::Sequence object.

OBJECT METHODS

Most methods are inherited from Ace::Sequence::Feature. The following methods are also supported:
segments()
  @segments = $gene->segments;

Return a list of Ace::Sequence::Feature objects corresponding to similar segments.

relative()
  $relative = $gene->relative;
  $gene->relative(1);

This turns on and off relative coordinates. By default, the exons and intron features will be returned in the coordinate system used by the gene. If relative() is set to a true value, then coordinates will be expressed as relative to the start of the gene. The first exon will (usually) be 1.

AUTHOR

Lincoln Stein <[email protected]> with extensive help from Jean Thierry-Mieg <[email protected]>

Copyright (c) 1999, Lincoln D. Stein

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See DISCLAIMER.txt for disclaimers of warranty.

POD ERRORS

Hey! The above document had some coding errors, which are explained below:
Around line 166:
You forgot a '=back' before '=head1'