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Full Discussion: Grep with Special Characters
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Grep with Special Characters Post 302147361 by manzier on Monday 26th of November 2007 02:05:36 PM
Old 11-26-2007
The grep command is only going to return what it finds in tmpUnsorted so if there is not a tab in tmpUnsorted I would check your code to see where you have embeded it.

Removing a leading tab(specifally for your code):

TABLESS=$(print -r $isThere | sed 's/=" */="/') # Removes multiple whitspaces after ="

TAB=$(printf "\t")
TABLESS=$(print -r $isThere | sed "s/=\"$TAB/=\"/") # Removes single tab character after ="
 

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Bio::SeqIO::tab(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				      Bio::SeqIO::tab(3pm)

NAME
Bio::SeqIO::tab - nearly raw sequence file input/output stream. Reads/writes id" "sequence" " SYNOPSIS
Do not use this module directly. Use it via the Bio::SeqIO class. DESCRIPTION
This object can transform Bio::Seq objects to and from tabbed flat file databases. It is very useful when doing large scale stuff using the Unix command line utilities (grep, sort, awk, sed, split, you name it). Imagine that you have a format converter 'seqconvert' along the following lines: my $in = Bio::SeqIO->newFh(-fh => *STDIN , '-format' => $from); my $out = Bio::SeqIO->newFh(-fh=> *STDOUT, '-format' => $to); print $out $_ while <$in>; then you can very easily filter sequence files for duplicates as: $ seqconvert < foo.fa -from fasta -to tab | sort -u | seqconvert -from tab -to fasta > foo-unique.fa Or grep [-v] for certain sequences with: $ seqconvert < foo.fa -from fasta -to tab | grep -v '^S[a-z]*control' | seqconvert -from tab -to fasta > foo-without-controls.fa Or chop up a huge file with sequences into smaller chunks with: $ seqconvert < all.fa -from fasta -to tab | split -l 10 - chunk- $ for i in chunk-*; do seqconvert -from tab -to fasta < $i > $i.fa; done # (this creates files chunk-aa.fa, chunk-ab.fa, ..., each containing 10 # sequences) FEEDBACK
Mailing Lists User feedback is an integral part of the evolution of this and other Bioperl modules. Send your comments and suggestions preferably to one of the Bioperl mailing lists. Your participation is much appreciated. bioperl-l@bioperl.org - General discussion http://bioperl.org/wiki/Mailing_lists - About the mailing lists Support Please direct usage questions or support issues to the mailing list: bioperl-l@bioperl.org rather than to the module maintainer directly. Many experienced and reponsive experts will be able look at the problem and quickly address it. Please include a thorough description of the problem with code and data examples if at all possible. Reporting Bugs Report bugs to the Bioperl bug tracking system to help us keep track the bugs and their resolution. Bug reports can be submitted via the web: https://redmine.open-bio.org/projects/bioperl/ AUTHORS
Philip Lijnzaad, p.lijnzaad@med.uu.nl APPENDIX
The rest of the documentation details each of the object methods. Internal methods are usually preceded with a _ next_seq Title : next_seq Usage : $seq = $stream->next_seq() Function: returns the next sequence in the stream Returns : Bio::Seq object Args : write_seq Title : write_seq Usage : $stream->write_seq($seq) Function: writes the $seq object into the stream Returns : 1 for success and 0 for error Args : Bio::Seq object perl v5.14.2 2012-03-02 Bio::SeqIO::tab(3pm)
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