[Biopython-dev] Bio.Graphics and GenomeDiagram
Leighton Pritchard
lpritc at scri.ac.uk
Wed Oct 15 06:39:11 EDT 2008
On 15/10/2008 11:24, "Peter" <biopython at maubp.freeserve.co.uk> wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 15, 2008 at 11:00 AM, Leighton Pritchard <lpritc at scri.ac.uk>
> wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> A while ago I wrote the GenomeDiagram library for drawing images of genomes
>> and other large biological sequences, and collections of sequences
>> (http://bioinf.scri.ac.uk/lp/programs.php#genomediagram). ...
>> Now that I have managed to free up a little bit of time I'd like to revisit
>> GenomeDiagram, tidy up the internals some more ..., and contribute it
>> to Bio.Graphics ..
>> I suggested something doing similar a while ago and got no feedback - does
>> anyone object to this contribution, in principle or in practice? Or are
>> there any other comments? I'm all (well, mostly) ears...
> One small thing I would change is switching colour to color for the
> argument/properties (the American spelling of color is the norm in all
> programming usage).
<grin> Fair point - I'll do that. Though, like those pesky Canadians (see
Maple), I'm inclined to permit either spelling out of sheer
bloody-mindedness ;). Historically (rather than etymologically), it's a
holdover from working with interim EMBL-ish .tab files from Sanger, which
use the British English spelling:
"""
FT /class="3.1.03"
FT /colour=7
FT /gene="asnA"
"""
Would people see permitting either form of colour/color as potentially
confusing? If so, I'm happy to go with the majority spelling.
> Anyone using the existing stand alone
> GenomeDiagram library would have to make some small changes anyway
> (new import statements), so if there are going to be any other API
> changes it would be best to do them at the same time.
I agree. I see this as a break from the standalone library, and would be
branching this version of GenomeDiagram from what had gone before. While
I'd like to make API changes as low-impact as possible, I'm in favour of
such changes where they support functional improvement.
Cheers,
L.
--
Dr Leighton Pritchard MRSC
D131, Plant Pathology Programme, SCRI
Errol Road, Invergowrie, Perth and Kinross, Scotland, DD2 5DA
e:lpritc at scri.ac.uk w:http://www.scri.ac.uk/staff/leightonpritchard
gpg/pgp: 0xFEFC205C tel:+44(0)1382 562731 x2405
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