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Introduction to Python

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1 Introduction to Python
BCHB524 Lecture 5 BCHB524 - Edwards

2 Outline Review, Homework #2 DNA as a string Program Input/Output
Extracting codons in DNA Counting in-frame codons in DNA Reverse Complement Program Input/Output raw_input, command-line arguments standard-input, standard-output, redirection BCHB524 - Edwards

3 Review Printing and execution Variables and basic data-types:
integers, floats, strings Arithmetic with, conversion between String characters and chunks, string methods Functions, using/calling and defining: Use in any expression Parameters as input, return for output Control Flow: if statements – conditional execution for statements – iterative execution BCHB524 - Edwards

4 DNA as a string seq = "gcatgacgttattacgactctgtgtggcgtctgctgggg" seqlen = len(seq) # set i to 0, 3, 6, 9, ..., 36 for i in range(0,seqlen,3):     # extract the codon as a string     codon = seq[i:i+3]          print codon print "Number of Met. amino-acids", seq.count("atg") BCHB524 - Edwards

5 DNA as a string What about upper and lower case?
ATG vs atg? Differences between DNA and RNA sequence? Substitute U for each T? How about ambiguous nucleotide symbols? What should we do with ‘N’ and other ambiguity codes (R, Y, W, S, M, K, H, B, V, D)? Strings don’t know any biology! BCHB524 - Edwards

6 DNA as a string seq = "gcatgacgttattacgactctgtgtggcgtctgctgggg" def inFrameMet(seq):     seqlen = len(seq)     count = 0     for i in range(0,seqlen,3):         codon = seq[i:i+3]         if codon.upper() == "ATG":             count = count + 1     return count print "Number of Met. amino-acids", inFrameMet(seq) BCHB524 - Edwards

7 DNA as a string input_seq = "catgacgttattacgactctgtgtggcgtctgctgggg" def complement(nuc):     nucleotides = 'ACGT'     complements = 'TGCA'     i = nucleotides.find(nuc)     comp = complements[i]     return comp def reverseComplement(seq):     newseq = ""     for nuc in seq:         newseq = complement(nuc) + newseq     return newseq print "Reverse complement:", reverseComplement(input_seq) BCHB524 - Edwards

8 DNA as a string input_seq = "catgacgttattacgactctgtgtggcgtctgctgggg" def complement(nuc):     nucleotides = 'ACGT'     complements = 'TGCA'     i = nucleotides.find(nuc)     if i >= 0:         comp = complements[i]     else:         comp = nuc     return comp def reverseComplement(seq):     seq = seq.upper()     newseq = ""     for nuc in seq:         newseq = complement(nuc) + newseq     return newseq print "Reverse complement:", reverseComplement(input_seq) BCHB524 - Edwards

9 Creating reusable programs
Need to get input data and options from the user …often us, but sometimes others, or us later. Sometimes, want completely new inputs …but often, want the same or similar input. Sometimes, typing the input is OK …but often, want to use data in a file. Sometimes, output to the screen is OK …but often, want the result to go into a file. BCHB524 - Edwards

10 Interactive input input_seq = raw_input("Type your codon: ") def complement(nuc):     nucleotides = 'ACGT'     complements = 'TGCA'     i = nucleotides.find(nuc)     if i >= 0:         comp = complements[i]     else:         comp = nuc     return comp def reverseComplement(seq):     seq = seq.upper()     newseq = ""     for nuc in seq:         newseq = complement(nuc) + newseq     return newseq print "Reverse complement:", reverseComplement(input_seq) BCHB524 - Edwards

11 Command-line input import sys input_seq = sys.argv[1] def complement(nuc):     nucleotides = 'ACGT'     complements = 'TGCA'     i = nucleotides.find(nuc)     if i >= 0:         comp = complements[i]     else:         comp = nuc     return comp def reverseComplement(seq):     seq = seq.upper()     newseq = ""     for nuc in seq:         newseq = complement(nuc) + newseq     return newseq print "Reverse complement:", reverseComplement(input_seq) BCHB524 - Edwards

12 Interactive and file input
import sys input_seq = sys.stdin.read() def complement(nuc):     nucleotides = 'ACGT'     complements = 'TGCA'     i = nucleotides.find(nuc)     if i >= 0:         comp = complements[i]     else:         comp = nuc     return comp def reverseComplement(seq):     seq = seq.upper()     newseq = ""     for nuc in seq:         newseq = complement(nuc) + newseq     return newseq print "Reverse complement:", reverseComplement(input_seq) BCHB524 - Edwards

13 File input only import sys seq_file = sys.argv[1] # MAGIC: open file, read contents, and remove whitespace input_seq = ''.join(open(seq_file).read().split()) def complement(nuc):     nucleotides = 'ACGT'     complements = 'TGCA'     i = nucleotides.find(nuc)     if i >= 0:         comp = complements[i]     else:         comp = nuc     return comp def reverseComplement(seq):     seq = seq.upper()     newseq = ""     for nuc in seq:         newseq = complement(nuc) + newseq     return newseq print "Reverse complement:", reverseComplement(input_seq) BCHB524 - Edwards

14 Input Summary raw_input provides interactive values from the user (also copy-and-paste) sys.stdin.read() provides interactive or file-based values from the user (also copy-and-paste) sys.argv[1] provides command-line values from the user (also copy-and-paste) value can be a filename that provides user-input Terminal standard-input redirection "<" can be used to send a file's contents to raw_input or sys.stdin.read() BCHB524 - Edwards

15 Output is easy… Just use print, right?
Print statements go to the terminal's standard-output. We can redirect to a file using ">" Errors still get printed to the terminal. We can also link programs together – standard-output to standard-input using "|" Also, cat just writes its file to standard out BCHB524 - Edwards

16 Connect reverse complement w/ codon counting…
Create and test rc.py from earlier slides: Sequence from standard-input Reverse complement sequence to standard-output Create and test codons.py from earlier slides: Count to standard-output Place example sequence in file: test.seq Execute: cat test.seq | python rc.py | python codons.py BCHB524 - Edwards

17 In general Windows and OS X have similar facilities
cmd in windows, terminal in OS X Powerful mechanism for making reusable programs No knowledge of python required for use! Most bioinformatics software is used from the command-line w/ command-line arguments: Files provide sequence data, etc. I'll promote this style of program I/O. BCHB524 - Edwards

18 Exercise 1 Use NCBI Probe (“google NCBI Probe”) to look up PCR markers for your favorite gene Write a command-line program to compute the reverse complement sequence for the forward and reverse primer. BCHB524 - Edwards

19 Exercise 2 Write a command-line program to test whether a PCR primer is a reverse complement palindrome. Such a primer might fold and self-hybridize! Test your program on at least the following primers: TTGAGTAGACGCGTCTACTCAA TTGAGTAGACGTCGTCTACTCAA ATATATATATATATAT ATCTATATATATGTAT BCHB524 - Edwards

20 Homework 3 Due Monday, September 19th. Submit using Canvas
Use only the techniques introduced so far. Make sure you can run the programs demonstrated in lecture(s). Exercises 4.1, 4.2 from Lecture 4 Exercises 5.1, 5.2 from Lecture 5 BCHB524 - Edwards


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