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R Bioinformatics Cookbook

You're reading from   R Bioinformatics Cookbook Utilize R packages for bioinformatics, genomics, data science, and machine learning

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837634279
Length 396 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Dan MacLean Dan MacLean
Author Profile Icon Dan MacLean
Dan MacLean
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Setting Up Your R Bioinformatics Working Environment 2. Chapter 2: Loading, Tidying, and Cleaning Data in the tidyverse FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: ggplot2 and Extensions for Publication Quality Plots 4. Chapter 4: Using Quarto to Make Data-Rich Reports, Presentations, and Websites 5. Chapter 5: Easily Performing Statistical Tests Using Linear Models 6. Chapter 6: Performing Quantitative RNA-seq 7. Chapter 7: Finding Genetic Variants with HTS Data 8. Chapter 8: Searching Gene and Protein Sequences for Domains and Motifs 9. Chapter 9: Phylogenetic Analysis and Visualization 10. Chapter 10: Analyzing Gene Annotations 11. Chapter 11: Machine Learning with mlr3 12. Chapter 12: Functional Programming with purrr and base R 13. Chapter 13: Turbo-Charging Development in R with ChatGPT 14. Index 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Reading and writing varied tree formats with ape and treeio

Phylogenetic analysis is a cornerstone of biology and bioinformatics. The programs are diverse and complex, the computations are long-running, and the datasets are often large. Many programs are standalone and many have proprietary input and output formats. This has created a very complex ecosystem that we must navigate when dealing with phylogenetic data, meaning that often the simplest strategy is to use combinations of tools to load, convert, and save the results of analyses in order to be able to use them in different packages. In this recipe, we’ll look at dealing with phylogenetic tree data in R. To date, R support for the wide range of tree formats is restricted, but a few key packages have sufficient standardized objects such that workflows can focus on a few types and conversion to those types is streamlined. We’ll look at using the ape and treeio packages to get tree data into and out of R.

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