Description Usage Arguments Details Author(s) See Also Examples
This man page documents inter range transformations of a GenomicRanges object (i.e. of an object that belongs to the GenomicRanges class or one of its subclasses, this includes for example GRanges objects), or a GRangesList object.
See ?`intra-range-methods`
and
?`inter-range-methods`
in the IRanges
package for a quick introduction to intra range and inter
range transformations.
See ?`intra-range-methods`
for
intra range transformations of a GenomicRanges object or
GRangesList object.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 | ## S4 method for signature 'GenomicRanges'
range(x, ..., with.revmap=FALSE, ignore.strand=FALSE, na.rm=FALSE)
## S4 method for signature 'GRangesList'
range(x, ..., with.revmap=FALSE, ignore.strand=FALSE, na.rm=FALSE)
## S4 method for signature 'GenomicRanges'
reduce(x, drop.empty.ranges=FALSE, min.gapwidth=1L, with.revmap=FALSE,
with.inframe.attrib=FALSE, ignore.strand=FALSE)
## S4 method for signature 'GRangesList'
reduce(x, drop.empty.ranges=FALSE, min.gapwidth=1L, with.revmap=FALSE,
with.inframe.attrib=FALSE, ignore.strand=FALSE)
## S4 method for signature 'GenomicRanges'
gaps(x, start=1L, end=seqlengths(x))
## S4 method for signature 'GenomicRanges'
disjoin(x, with.revmap=FALSE, ignore.strand=FALSE)
## S4 method for signature 'GRangesList'
disjoin(x, with.revmap=FALSE, ignore.strand=FALSE)
## S4 method for signature 'GenomicRanges'
isDisjoint(x, ignore.strand=FALSE)
## S4 method for signature 'GRangesList'
isDisjoint(x, ignore.strand=FALSE)
## S4 method for signature 'GenomicRanges'
disjointBins(x, ignore.strand=FALSE)
|
x |
A GenomicRanges or GenomicRangesList object. |
drop.empty.ranges, min.gapwidth, with.revmap, with.inframe.attrib, start, end |
See |
ignore.strand |
|
... |
For |
na.rm |
Ignored. |
range
returns an object of the same type as x
containing range bounds for each distinct (seqname, strand) pairing.
The names (names(x)
) and the metadata columns in x
are
dropped.
reduce
returns an object of the same type as x
containing reduced ranges for each distinct (seqname, strand) pairing.
The names (names(x)
) and the metadata columns in x
are
dropped.
See ?reduce
for more information about range
reduction and for a description of the optional arguments.
gaps
returns an object of the same type as x
containing complemented ranges for each distinct (seqname, strand) pairing.
The names (names(x)
) and the columns in x
are dropped.
For the start and end arguments of this gaps method, it is expected that
the user will supply a named integer vector (where the names correspond to
the appropriate seqlevels). See ?gaps
for more
information about range complements and for a description of the optional
arguments.
disjoin
returns an object of the same type as x
containing disjoint ranges for each distinct (seqname, strand) pairing.
The names (names(x)
) and the metadata columns in x
are
dropped. If with.revmap=TRUE
, a metadata column that maps the
ouput ranges to the input ranges is added to the returned object.
See ?disjoin
for more information.
isDisjoint
returns a logical value indicating whether the ranges
in x
are disjoint (i.e. non-overlapping).
disjointBins
returns bin indexes for the ranges in x
, such
that ranges in the same bin do not overlap. If ignore.strand=FALSE
,
the two features cannot overlap if they are on different strands.
When they are supported on GRangesList object x
, the above inter
range transformations will apply the transformation to each of the list
elements in x
and return a list-like object parallel to
x
(i.e. with 1 list element per list element in x
).
If x
has names on it, they're propagated to the returned object.
H. Pagès and P. Aboyoun
The GenomicRanges and GRanges classes.
The IntegerRanges class in the IRanges package.
The inter-range-methods man page in the IRanges package.
GenomicRanges-comparison for comparing and ordering genomic ranges.
endoapply
in the S4Vectors package.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 | gr <- GRanges(
seqnames=Rle(paste("chr", c(1, 2, 1, 3), sep=""), c(1, 3, 2, 4)),
ranges=IRanges(1:10, width=10:1, names=letters[1:10]),
strand=Rle(strand(c("-", "+", "*", "+", "-")), c(1, 2, 2, 3, 2)),
score=1:10,
GC=seq(1, 0, length=10)
)
gr
gr1 <- GRanges(seqnames="chr2", ranges=IRanges(3, 6),
strand="+", score=5L, GC=0.45)
gr2 <- GRanges(seqnames="chr1",
ranges=IRanges(c(10, 7, 19), width=5),
strand=c("+", "-", "+"), score=3:5, GC=c(0.3, 0.5, 0.66))
gr3 <- GRanges(seqnames=c("chr1", "chr2"),
ranges=IRanges(c(1, 4), c(3, 9)),
strand=c("-", "-"), score=c(6L, 2L), GC=c(0.4, 0.1))
grl <- GRangesList(gr1=gr1, gr2=gr2, gr3=gr3)
grl
## ---------------------------------------------------------------------
## range()
## ---------------------------------------------------------------------
## On a GRanges object:
range(gr)
range(gr, with.revmap=TRUE)
## On a GRangesList object:
range(grl)
range(grl, ignore.strand=TRUE)
range(grl, with.revmap=TRUE, ignore.strand=TRUE)
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------
## reduce()
## ---------------------------------------------------------------------
reduce(gr)
gr2 <- reduce(gr, with.revmap=TRUE)
revmap <- mcols(gr2)$revmap # an IntegerList
## Use the mapping from reduced to original ranges to group the original
## ranges by reduced range:
relist(gr[unlist(revmap)], revmap)
## Or use it to split the DataFrame of original metadata columns by
## reduced range:
relist(mcols(gr)[unlist(revmap), ], revmap) # a SplitDataFrameList
## [For advanced users] Use this reverse mapping to compare the reduced
## ranges with the ranges they originate from:
expanded_gr2 <- rep(gr2, elementNROWS(revmap))
reordered_gr <- gr[unlist(revmap)]
codes <- pcompare(expanded_gr2, reordered_gr)
## All the codes should translate to "d", "e", "g", or "h" (the 4 letters
## indicating that the range on the left contains the range on the right):
alphacodes <- rangeComparisonCodeToLetter(pcompare(expanded_gr2, reordered_gr))
stopifnot(all(alphacodes %in% c("d", "e", "g", "h")))
## On a big GRanges object with a lot of seqlevels:
mcols(gr) <- NULL
biggr <- c(gr, GRanges("chr1", IRanges(c(4, 1), c(5, 2)), strand="+"))
seqlevels(biggr) <- paste0("chr", 1:2000)
biggr <- rep(biggr, 25000)
set.seed(33)
seqnames(biggr) <- sample(factor(seqlevels(biggr), levels=seqlevels(biggr)),
length(biggr), replace=TRUE)
biggr2 <- reduce(biggr, with.revmap=TRUE)
revmap <- mcols(biggr2)$revmap
expanded_biggr2 <- rep(biggr2, elementNROWS(revmap))
reordered_biggr <- biggr[unlist(revmap)]
codes <- pcompare(expanded_biggr2, reordered_biggr)
alphacodes <- rangeComparisonCodeToLetter(pcompare(expanded_biggr2,
reordered_biggr))
stopifnot(all(alphacodes %in% c("d", "e", "g", "h")))
table(alphacodes)
## On a GRangesList object:
reduce(grl) # Doesn't really reduce anything but note the reordering
# of the inner elements in the 2nd and 3rd list elements:
# the ranges are reordered by sequence name first (which
# should appear in the same order as in 'seqlevels(grl)'),
# and then by strand.
reduce(grl, ignore.strand=TRUE) # 2nd list element got reduced
## ---------------------------------------------------------------------
## gaps()
## ---------------------------------------------------------------------
gaps(gr, start=1, end=10)
## ---------------------------------------------------------------------
## disjoin(), isDisjoint(), disjointBins()
## ---------------------------------------------------------------------
disjoin(gr)
disjoin(gr, with.revmap=TRUE)
disjoin(gr, with.revmap=TRUE, ignore.strand=TRUE)
isDisjoint(gr)
stopifnot(isDisjoint(disjoin(gr)))
disjointBins(gr)
stopifnot(all(sapply(split(gr, disjointBins(gr)), isDisjoint)))
## On a GRangesList object:
disjoin(grl) # doesn't really disjoin anything but note the reordering
disjoin(grl, with.revmap=TRUE)
|
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