
EMBOSS User's Guide
Practical Bioinformatics
Cambridge University Press
Book
Hardback
978-0-521-84519-9 (ISBN)
The article will not be published
Description
The European Molecular Biology Open Software Suite (EMBOSS) is a well established, high quality package of open source software tools for molecular biology. It includes over 200 applications for molecular sequence analysis and general bioinformatics including sequence alignment, rapid database searching and sequence retrieval, motif identification and pattern analysis and much more. The EMBOSS User's Guide is the official and definitive guide to the package, containing comprehensive information and practical instructions from the people who developed it: * No prior experience with EMBOSS necessary * Set up and maintenance - get up and running quickly * Hands-on tutorial - learn EMBOSS the easy way, by working through practical examples * Data types and file formats - learn about the biological data that can be manipulated and analysed * In-depth explanation of the EMBOSS command line - learn advanced 'power user' features * Practical guides to popular EMBOSS GUIs (wEMBOSS and Jemboss)
Reviews / Votes
"... this users' guide is a comprehensive, detailed explanation of how to interact with EMBOSS. It is particularly useful for dedicated users of the system."Sara Kalvala, Computing Reviews
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Illustrations
50 Tables, black and white; 4 Halftones, unspecified; 5 Line drawings, unspecified
ISBN-13
978-0-521-84519-9 (9780521845199)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
New editions

Book
06/2011
Cambridge University Press
€52.07
Article exhausted; check different version
Additional editions

Book
06/2011
Cambridge University Press
€52.07
Article exhausted; check different version
Persons
Peter Rice is a group leader at the European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI, Hinxton, UK), a centre for research and services in bioinformatics and part of the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL). His group investigates and advises on the e-Science and Grid technology requirements of the EMBL-EBI, through application development plus participation in standards development. His group also houses the EMBOSS project. Dr Rice instigated EMBOSS in 1996 when he was based at the Sanger Centre (Hinxton, UK), with Alan Bleasby (SEQNET, Daresbury) and in collaboration with Thure Etzold (EMBL-EBI). He left Sanger in 2000 to work for LION Biosciences, and in 2003 joined the EMBL-EBI. Alan Bleasby is a Senior Scientific Officer at EMBL-EBI. He developed the early EMBOSS programming library (AJAX) at Daresbury Laboratory (Warrington, UK) where he was responsible for the SEQNET UK national bioinformatics service. Dr Bleasby moved to the UK Medical Research Council Human Genome Mapping Project Resource Centre (UK HGMP-RC) when the SEQNET and HGMP-RC services merged in early 1999, where he was Group Leader of the Proteomics Applications Group and coordinated EMBOSS. When the HGMP-RC closed in 2005, he moved to the EBI to work full-time on EMBOSS. Jon Ison is a Senior Scientific Officer at EMBL-EBI. He moved from Leeds to the UK HGMP-RC in 1999 to work on the Collaborative Computing Project in Biosequence and Structure Analysis (CCP11), before taking the post of Software Specialist for the Proteomics Applications Group in 2000. Dr Ison has been a lead contributor and developer of EMBOSS since then, moving in 2005 with Alan Bleasby to the EMBL-EBI where he helps coordinate the project with Peter Rice and Alan Bleasby.
Content
Acknowledgements; 1. Preface; 2. Conventions used in the manual; 3. Welcome to the EMBOSS user's manual; 4. Background to EMBOSS; 5. Basic set-up and maintenance; 6. Getting started; 7. Tutorial; 8. File formats; 9. The EMBOSS command line; 10. Applications and packages; 11. EMBOSS application reference; 12. EMBASSY application reference; 13. Interfaces; 14. Using EMBOSS under wEMBOSS; 15. Using EMBOSS under Jemboss.