Beginning Perl for Bioinformatics

£21.50

Beginning Perl for Bioinformatics

An Introduction to Perl for Biologists

Biology, life sciences Information technology: general topics Linux Open source and other operating systems Web programming Programming and scripting languages: general Software Engineering

Author: James Tisdall

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Language: English

Published by: O'Reilly Media

Published on: 22nd October 2001

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 2 Mb

ISBN: 9780596550479


With its highly developed capacity to detect patterns in data, Perl has become one of the most popular languages for biological data analysis. But if you''re a biologist with little or no programming experience, starting out in Perl can be a challenge. Many biologists have a difficult time learning how to apply the language to bioinformatics. The most popular Perl programming books are often too theoretical and too focused on computer science for a non-programming biologist who needs to solve very specific problems.Beginning Perl for Bioinformatics is designed to get you quickly over the Perl language barrier by approaching programming as an important new laboratory skill, revealing Perl programs and techniques that are immediately useful in the lab. Each chapter focuses on solving a particular bioinformatics problem or class of problems, starting with the simplest and increasing in complexity as the book progresses. Each chapter includes programming exercises and teaches bioinformatics by showing and modifying programs that deal with various kinds of practical biological problems. By the end of the book you''ll have a solid understanding of Perl basics, a collection of programs for such tasks as parsing BLAST and GenBank, and the skills to take on more advanced bioinformatics programming. Some of the later chapters focus in greater detail on specific bioinformatics topics. This book is suitable for use as a classroom textbook, for self-study, and as a reference.

The book covers:

  • Programming basics and working with DNA sequences and strings
  • Debugging your code
  • Simulating gene mutations using random number generators
  • Regular expressions and finding motifs in data
  • Arrays, hashes, and relational databases
  • Regular expressions and restriction maps
  • Using Perl to parse PDB records, annotations in GenBank, and BLAST output

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