Tools for analysis of genomics & sequencing data
Project description
For documentation, see our home page on ReadtheDocs.
To run the tests, download the test dataset and unpack it into plastid/test.
Introduction
plastid is a Python library for genomic analysis – in particular, high-throughput sequencing data – with an emphasis on simplicity for users. It was written by Joshua Dunn in Jonathan Weissman’s lab at UCSF, initially for analysis of ribosome profiling and RNA-seq data. Versions of it have been used in several publications.
plastid’s intended audience includes computational and traditional biologists, software developers, and even those who are new to sequencing analysis. It is released under the BSD 3-Clause license.
This package provides:
A set of scripts that implement common sequencing analyses
A set of classes for exploratory data anlysis. These provide simple and consistent interfaces for manipulating genomic features, read alignments, and quantitative data; and readily interface with existing scientific tools, like the SciPy stack.
Script writing tools that make it easy to use the objects implemented in plastid.
Extensive documentation, both in source code and at our home page on ReadtheDocs.
Installation
plastid can be installed directly from PyPI, but requires numpy, pysam, and cython to be installed first i.e.:
$ pip install numpy pysam cython $ pip install plastid
If you get any runtime warnings about numpy versions having changed, or about a missing module in Pysam, or about some object being the wrong size, try regenerating the included C source files from the original Cython code. To do this type:
$ pip install --upgrade --install-option='--recythonize' plastid
Links & help
Subscribe to our mailing list by emailing listserv@listserv.ucsf.edu with the message subscribe plastidinfo firstname lastname and an empty subject line
Test dataset, for development or validation of installations
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.