NAME

recs-tofasta

USAGE

Help from: --help-basic:
Usage: recs-tofasta <options> [files]
   Outputs a FASTA-formatted sequence for each record.

   By default the keys "id", "description", and "sequence" are used to build the
   FASTA format. These defaults match up with what recs-fromfasta produces.

Arguments:
   --id|-i <keyspec>            Record field to use for the sequence id
   --description|-d <keyspec>   Record field to use for the sequence description
   --sequence|-s <keyspec>      Record field to use for the sequence itself
   --width|w <#>                Format sequence blocks to # characters wide
   --oneline                    Format sequences on a single long line
   --passthru                   Pass through nucleotides unformatted
   --filename-key|fk <keyspec>  Add a key with the source filename (if no
                                filename is applicable will put NONE)

  Help Options:
      --help-all       Output all help for this script
      --help           This help screen
      --help-keys      Help on keygroups and keyspecs
      --help-keyspecs  Help on keyspecs, a way to index deeply and with regexes

Examples:
  # Remove gaps from a fasta file
  recs-fromfasta seqs.fa | recs-xform '{{sequence}} =~ s/-//g' | recs-tofasta > seqs-nogaps.fa

Help from: --help-keyspecs:
  KEY SPECS
   A key spec is short way of specifying a field with prefixes or regular
   expressions, it may also be nested into hashes and arrays. Use a '/' to nest
   into a hash and a '#NUM' to index into an array (i.e. #2)

   An example is in order, take a record like this:

     {"biz":["a","b","c"],"foo":{"bar 1":1},"zap":"blah1"}
     {"biz":["a","b","c"],"foo":{"bar 1":2},"zap":"blah2"}
     {"biz":["a","b","c"],"foo":{"bar 1":3},"zap":"blah3"}

   In this case a key spec of 'foo/bar 1' would have the values 1,2, and 3 in
   the respective records.

   Similarly, 'biz/#0' would have the value of 'a' for all 3 records

   You can also prefix key specs with '@' to engage the fuzzy matching logic

   Fuzzy matching works like this in order, first key to match wins
     1. Exact match ( eq )
     2. Prefix match ( m/^/ )
     3. Match anywehre in the key (m//)

   So, in the above example '@b/#2', the 'b' portion would expand to 'biz' and 2
   would be the index into the array, so all records would have the value of 'c'

   Simiarly, @f/b would have values 1, 2, and 3

   You can escape / with a \. For example, if you have a record:
   {"foo/bar":2}

   You can address that key with foo\/bar

SEE ALSO

App::RecordStream::Bio