[BioRuby] [PhyloSoC] Project plan for phyloXML integration with BioRuby
Christian M Zmasek
czmasek at burnham.org
Thu Apr 2 19:01:13 EDT 2009
Diane:
Thank you for your interest in this project!
Indeed, the hour is late, and your proposal still needs significant work
in order to be competitive.
I think you already got some comments from Hilmar (I am at work and I
cannot use IRC).
Beside those, I'd like to suggest:
1. please make sure that all the studying is done before the coding
begins (May 23) (i.e. your "week 1" should be during the "community
bonding period").
2. You do not need to develop classes for objects already present in
BioRuby (such as phylogenetic trees). Actually, the less new classes you
have to introduce to better -- reuse!
3. I am happy to see that you include unit test early on, this is good!
You have to make extensive use of BioRuby's test suite.
4. In general, your weekly goals are not described in enough detail. It
might be a good idea to discuss goals, deliverables, anticipated
problems/difficulties (and possible solutions) for each week.
5. Documentation is very important(!)
6. Do you plan to maintain the code after the summer?
Since the abstract is due April 3rd and cannot be changed after that it
is best to concentrate on the abstract first, though.
(The project plan can still be tweaked after April 3rd, I understand.)
In the abstract you have to make clear that you understand the _biology_
behind the project. Why does phyloXML have the elements it has? Why is
it useful? Might have a look at: http://www.phyloxml.org and
http://www.tdwg.org/proceedings/article/view/437.
Can you show that you understand what evolutionary trees are? Where and
why are they used?
Are they only important in 'tree of life' applications (e.g. see:
http://www.liebertonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1089/omi.2006.10.231)
What is "phylogenomics", what is "comparative genomics"?
You could also go to [http://monochrome-effect.net/publications.html]
and have a quick look at some of the papers there, most are related to
the issues at hand, and some show real world applications of
phylogenetic trees.
How might participating in this project help your career? What do plan
to learn? Why are you a good candidate for this?
Hope this helps some,
CZ
Diana Jaunzeikare wrote:
> Hi everybody,
>
> I know this is kinda late and I should have contacted you earlier, but
> better later than never. I found out about Phyloinformatics Summer of
> Code just last night when I was doing homework for Bioinformatics lab
> on Phylogenetic reconstruction and Parsimony. I was reading various
> bio-tech related blogs in Google reader and in the Google Top
> Recomendations bar I saw the blog of The Tree of Life. There I read
> the blog post about Phyloinformatics Summer of Code. This was very
> exciting news for me! I almost jumped off the sofa of the excitement
> :) Already for two years I wanted to participate in Google summer of
> code, but it never really fit with what i was doing at the time. When
> I saw the project about integrating phyloXML with BioRuby I knew it
> was for me! I am a big fun of Ruby! Last semester for my Computational
> Biology seminar I wrote bunch of scripts to deal with PDB database for
> my final project. Also it has been pleasure to develop in Ruby on
> Rails. What is even more exciting, is that my research interests lie
> in Bioinformatics. In fact, I had thoughts before to develop for
> BioRuby, but I didn't have a good enough reason before.
>
> Here is my project plan for building support for phyloXML for BioRuby.
> I think the emphasis should be on the ease of use for biologists and a
> lot of example code.
>
>
> Week1 :
> * Get familiar with BioRuby, its structure, classes (like Bio:Tree),
> coding conventions, documentation conventions. See other
> implementations of XML parsers in BioRuby (like BLAST XML).
> * Get familiar with phyloXML, its structure, typical uses. Get data
> set of many different files in phyloXML format for testing.
>
> Week 2:
> * Try to write a program which would use phyloXMl data in order to
> understand what would be the easiest way to use it. (Later will be
> used for unit testing).
> * Desing the architecture of phyloXML class, parser and writer,
> interface with other classes (like alignment class).
>
> Week 3: Develop the some/basic/the most essential objects of phyloXML
> (Phylogeny, Clade, Taxonomy).
>
> Weeks 4-5: Develop phyloXML parser.
>
> Weeks 6-7: Develop phyloXML writer.
>
> Week 8: Develop the rest of the objects of phyloXML.
>
> Week 9: Update parser.
>
> Week 10: Update writer.
>
> Week 11: Finish up documentation. Write extensive examples of how to
> use the code.
>
> Week 12: Do write up of the project.
>
>
> What do you think about the project plan? Anything missing?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Diana
>
>
> Diana Jaunzeikare
> Smith College
> Computer Science and Math double major '10
> CS Department Liaison and Master Tutor
> email: djaunzei at email.smith.edu <mailto:djaunzei at email.smith.edu>
> cell: 413-387-2083
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