Bioperl 1.0 Release 8
President Chimp Toe writes "The landmark 1.0 release of bioperl has just been
announced. Bioperl is an open-source collection of perl modules designed for the life-sciences community, offering a comprehensive range of modules for DNA and protein sequence manipulation and analysis. More broadly speaking, bioperl is a beautiful example of the virtues of open-source programming and code re-use. Assembled over the last few years by a diverse group of individuals from academia and the private sector, bioperl has made life easier for countless bioinformatics and computational biologists. It allows us to cut out the crappy part of programming (dealing with biological data formats, for instance), and concentrate on the fun part - answering biological questions. Thanks all those involved - keep up the good work!"
More to biology than genomics! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:More to biology than genomics! (Score:2, Interesting)
I bet they just don't have any ppl using perl for that means, or at least no one has contacted them with such code... you could be the first.
I'm just happy to see perl making itself more and more useful
Re:More to biology than genomics! (Score:4, Informative)
The content of Bioperl is driven far more by the interests of the bioperl community than by some malfeasant desire to exclude ecologists. What started out as a codebase dealing mostly with parsing sequence files and results from sequence-analysis applications is slowly branching out to include code for analysis of phylogenetic trees, etc.
If bioperl doesn't meet your needs the community as a whole needs to hear from you! Let the mailing list [perl.org] know what interests you or, even better, start contributing code!
The Bio* namespace can help address your problems only if you share them with the community! :)
-j
More about the story (Score:3, Informative)
* Project page on freshmeat [freshmeat.net](sources, cvs, mailing lists, etc.)
* Bioperl Documentation [bioperl.org]
* Bioperl's Gene Object in UML [bitsjournal.com] (very nice diagram)
* Beowulf & Bioperl discussion [wustl.edu]
And related stuff that may interest you...
* BioPython [biopython.org]
* BioCORBA [biocorba.org]
* BioXML [bioxml.org]
* BioJava [biojava.org]
* BioRuby [bioruby.org]
* BioExchange Software tools [bioexchange.com] (other tools for working with bio*, interesting.)
Anyone that can point out some.. (Score:1)