[Bioperl-l] Bio::*Taxonomy* changes
Chris Fields
cjfields at uiuc.edu
Tue Jul 18 01:55:28 UTC 2006
I agree with Hilmar's assessment, not b/c I disagree with your
definition of scientific name or the reasoning Sendu proposes. I
think we are somewhat bound to NCBI's nomenclature for their tax
database. If we veer away from NCBI's definition for 'scientific
name' it will just confuse users and lead to more trouble than it's
worth, frankly. If we stick with it then any changes NCBI makes
should be easier to deal with.
Leaving the scientific_name as NCBI designates it, though it probably
disagrees with ~99% of the world's textbooks, may be the most
maintainable solution.
Now, binomial() on the other hand...
Chris
On Jul 17, 2006, at 7:52 PM, Brian Osborne wrote:
> Sendu,
>
> The string "sapiens" is not what a biology textbook would call a
> scientific
> name. You're going to have to respect decades of convention and have
> scientific_name() return the genus and species name.
>
> Brian O.
>
>
> On 7/17/06 5:33 PM, "Sendu Bala" <bix at sendu.me.uk> wrote:
>
>> # I plan on maintaining this; scientific_name() would give you the
>> non-redundant sibling-unique name 'sapiens'. binomial() on a species
>> rank and lower would give you 'Homo sapiens' (presumably grabbing the
>> 'Homo' from the parent node with rank 'genus', or similar).
>
>
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Christopher Fields
Postdoctoral Researcher
Lab of Dr. Robert Switzer
Dept of Biochemistry
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
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