[Biopython-announce] Biopython 1.57 released
Brad Chapman
chapmanb at 50mail.com
Sat Apr 2 12:21:19 UTC 2011
The Biopython community is pleased to announce the release of
Biopython 1.57. Source distributions are available from the
downloads page on the Biopython website and from the Python
Package Index (Windows installers coming soon):
http://biopython.org/wiki/Download
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/biopython
Bio.SeqIO now includes an index_db() function which extends the existing
indexing functionality to allow indexing many files, and more importantly
this keeps the index on disk in a simple SQLite3 database rather than in
memory in a Python dictionary.
Bio.Blast.Applications now includes a wrapper for the BLAST+ blast_formatter
tool from NCBI BLAST 2.2.24+ or later. This release of BLAST+ added the
ability to run the BLAST tools and save the output as ASN.1 format, and then
convert this to any other supported BLAST ouput format (plain text, tabular,
XML, or HTML) with the blast_formatter tool. The wrappers were also updated
to include new arguments added in BLAST 2.2.25+ such as -db_hard_mask.
The SeqRecord object now has a reverse_complement method (similar to that of
the Seq object). This is most useful to reversing per-letter-annotation (such
as quality scores from FASTQ) or features (such as annotation from GenBank).
Bio.SeqIO.write's QUAL output has been sped up, and Bio.SeqIO.convert now
uses an optimised routine for FASTQ to QUAL making this much faster.
Biopython can now be installed with pip. Thanks to David Koppstein and
James Casbon for reporting the problem.
Bio.SeqIO.write now uses lower case for the sequence for GenBank, EMBL and
IMGT output.
The Bio.PDB module received several fixes and improvements, including starting
to merge João's work from GSoC 2010; consequently Atom objects now know
their element type and IUPAC mass. (The new features that use these
attributes won't be included in Biopython until the next release, though, so
stay tuned.)
The nodetype hierachy in the Bio.SCOP.Cla.Record class is now a dictionary
(previously it was a list of key,value tuples) to better match the standard.
Many thanks to the Biopython developers and community for making this release
possible, especially the following contributors:
Brad Chapman
Eric Talevich
Erick Matsen (first contribution)
Hongbo Zhu
Jeffrey Finkelstein (first contribution)
Joanna & Dominik Kasprzak (first contribution)
Joao Rodrigues
Kristian Rother
Leighton Pritchard
Michiel de Hoon
Peter Cock
Peter Thorpe
Phillip Garland
Walter Gillett (first contribution)
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