[Bioperl-l] Re: No joins

Lincoln Stein lstein@cshl.org
Fri, 16 Aug 2002 11:03:31 -0400


Can someone point me to an example of an algorithm that makes use of fuzzies, 
either from the ASCII art representation or from ASN.1.  Or are the fuzzies 
intended only for human consumption?

Lincoln

On Thursday 15 August 2002 12:36 pm, Ewan Birney wrote:
> Brian -
>
>
> I would certainly agree with you that joins are bad, and in fact Bioperl
> originally had a heirarchical feature only system and joins implicitly
> went into these cases.
>
>
>
> However as more people used it being able to store and process 100% of
> EMBL/GenBank became a priority, and we bolted on the location stuff -
> location stuff was really driven in by the fuzzies (aaaah, the fuzzies)
> which are distinctly hard to handle inside heirarichal features (what does
> biojava do with the fuzzies?) but most fuzzies are also joins, (in fact
> alot of joins have fuzzy ends) so... it became the defacto way to handle
> joins.
>
>
> Of course the frustrating thing is that noone *can* use the fuzzies but
> the semantic interpretation of fuzzies is just... impossible to remain
> cosnsistent across more than 2 records. Fuzzies are for human warm-fuzzy
> feelings that the data format is representing everything they know and is
> just a semantic mire for computers.
>
>
>
> I agree it gives us so much semantic rope to hang ourselves with it is
> scary. But there is not an obvious ideal solution:
>
>    - somehow represent all things inside hierarchial features, including
> the fuzzies (brain-ache)
>
>    - not handle 100% of Genbank (means a large number of uses cases fail)
>
>
>
> If there is something obvious I am missing here, shout, but this is
> somewhere between rock-and-hard-place in my experience.
>
>
>
> Practical question - what does BioJava do with the Fuzzies?
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------
> Ewan Birney. Mobile: +44 (0)7970 151230, Work: +44 1223 494420
> <birney@ebi.ac.uk>.
> -----------------------------------------------------------------
>
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-- 
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Lincoln D. Stein                           Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
lstein@cshl.org			                  Cold Spring Harbor, NY
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