Description Usage Arguments Value Author(s) Examples
Taking in an integer in base 10, it gives the integer in base 10 that represents the reverse complement. NOT FULLY TESTED
1 | rev_comp_c(number_b10, alph, k, base)
|
number_b10 |
An integer in base 10, representing a kmer |
alph |
The alphabet we are using. A dataframe created using build_alphabet() |
k |
The length of kmers we are assessing. Used as a check. |
base |
The base of our representation, default is 4. This corresponds to the number of distinct nucleotides we are processing. |
An integer, representing the reverse complementary kmer
Tom Mayo t.mayo@ed.ac.uk
1 2 | alph <- kmermods::build_alphabet()
rev_comp_meth(100,alph,3)
|
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