\usage{
read.dna(file, format = "interleaved", skip = 0,
nlines = 0, comment.char = "#", seq.names = NULL,
- as.character = FALSE)
+ as.character = FALSE, as.matrix = NULL)
}
\arguments{
\item{file}{a file name specified by either a variable of mode character,
or a double-quoted string.}
\item{format}{a character string specifying the format of the DNA
- sequences. Three choices are possible: \code{"interleaved"},
- \code{"sequential"}, or \code{"fasta"}, or any unambiguous
- abbreviation of these.}
+ sequences. Four choices are possible: \code{"interleaved"},
+ \code{"sequential"}, \code{"clustal"}, or \code{"fasta"}, or any
+ unambiguous abbreviation of these.}
\item{skip}{the number of lines of the input file to skip before
beginning to read data.}
\item{nlines}{the number of lines to be read (by default the file is
names read in the file are used.}
\item{as.character}{a logical controlling whether to return the
sequences as an object of class \code{"DNAbin"} (the default).}
+ \item{as.matrix}{(used if \code{format = "fasta"}) one of the three
+ followings: (i) \code{NULL}: returns the sequences in a matrix if
+ they are of the same length, otherwise in a list; (ii) \code{TRUE}:
+ returns the sequences in a matrix, or stops with an error if they
+ are of different lengths; (iii) \code{FALSE}: always returns the
+ sequences in a list.}
}
\description{
This function reads DNA sequences in a file, and returns a matrix or a
\details{
This function follows the interleaved and sequential formats defined
in PHYLIP (Felsenstein, 1993) but with the original feature than there
- is no restriction on the lengths of the taxa names (though a data file
- with 10-characters-long taxa names is fine as well). For these two
+ is no restriction on the lengths of the taxa names. For these two
formats, the first line of the file must contain the dimensions of the
data (the numbers of taxa and the numbers of nucleotides); the
sequences are considered as aligned and thus must be of the same
the file unless the `seq.names' option is used. Particularities for
each format are detailed below.
+\itemize{
\item{Interleaved:}{the function starts to read the sequences when it
finds 10 contiguous characters belonging to the ambiguity code of
the IUPAC (namely A, C, G, T, U, M, R, W, S, Y, K, V, H, D, B, and
sequences are then read until the number of nucleotides specified in
the first line of the file is reached. This is repeated for each taxa.}
+ \item{Clustal:}{this is the format output by the Clustal programs
+ (.aln). It is somehow similar to the interleaved format: the
+ differences being that the dimensions of the data are not indicated
+ in the file, and the names of the sequences are repeated in each block.}
+
\item{FASTA:}{This looks like the sequential format but the taxa names
(or rather a description of the sequence) are on separate lines
beginning with a `greater than' character ``>'' (there may be
leading spaces before this character). These lines are taken as taxa
names after removing the ``>'' and the possible leading and trailing
spaces. All the data in the file before the first sequence is ignored.}
-}
+}}
\value{
a matrix or a list (if \code{format = "fasta"}) of DNA sequences
stored in binary format, or of mode character (if \code{as.character =
\code{\link{read.GenBank}}, \code{\link{write.dna}},
\code{\link{DNAbin}}, \code{\link{dist.dna}}, \code{\link{woodmouse}}
}
-\author{Emmanuel Paradis \email{Emmanuel.Paradis@mpl.ird.fr}}
+\author{Emmanuel Paradis}
\examples{
### a small extract from `data(woddmouse)'
cat("3 40",
" ACTAAAAATT ATCAATCACT",
file = "exdna.txt", sep = "\n")
ex.dna2 <- read.dna("exdna.txt")
+### ... in clustal format...
+cat("CLUSTAL (ape) multiple sequence alignment", "",
+"No305 NTTCGAAAAACACACCCACTACTAAAANTTATCAGTCACT",
+"No304 ATTCGAAAAACACACCCACTACTAAAAATTATCAACCACT",
+"No306 ATTCGAAAAACACACCCACTACTAAAAATTATCAATCACT",
+" ************************** ****** ****",
+file = "exdna.txt", sep = "\n")
+ex.dna3 <- read.dna("exdna.txt", format = "clustal")
### ... and in FASTA format
cat("> No305",
"NTTCGAAAAACACACCCACTACTAAAANTTATCAGTCACT",
"> No306",
"ATTCGAAAAACACACCCACTACTAAAAATTATCAATCACT",
file = "exdna.txt", sep = "\n")
-ex.dna3 <- read.dna("exdna.txt", format = "fasta")
-### These are the same!
+ex.dna4 <- read.dna("exdna.txt", format = "fasta")
+### The first three are the same!
identical(ex.dna, ex.dna2)
identical(ex.dna, ex.dna3)
+identical(ex.dna, ex.dna4)
unlink("exdna.txt") # clean-up
}
\keyword{IO}