NAME
PathI - Interface for a path between ontology terms
SYNOPSIS
# see documentation of methods and an implementation, e.g.,
# Bio::Ontology::Path
DESCRIPTION
This is the minimal interface for a path between two terms in an ontology. Ontology engines may use this.
Essentially this is a very thin extension of the Bio::Ontology::RelationshipI interface. It basically adds an attribute distance(). For a RelationshipI, you can think of distance as equal to zero (subject == object) or 1 (subject != object).
FEEDBACK
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Reporting Bugs
Report bugs to the Bioperl bug tracking system to help us keep track of the bugs and their resolution. Bug reports can be submitted via email or the web:
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AUTHOR - Hilmar Lapp
Email hlapp at gmx.net
CONTRIBUTORS
Additional contributors names and emails here
APPENDIX
The rest of the documentation details each of the object methods. Internal methods are usually preceded with a _
distance
Title : distance
Usage : $obj->distance($newval)
Function: Get (and set if the implementation allows it) the distance
between the two terms connected by this path.
Example :
Returns : value of distance (a scalar)
Args : on set, new value (a scalar or undef, optional)
Bio::Ontology::RelationshipI Methods
subject_term
Title : subject_term
Usage : $subj = $rel->subject_term();
Function: Set/get for the subject term of this Relationship.
The common convention for ontologies is to express
relationships between terms as triples (subject, predicate,
object).
Returns : The subject term [Bio::Ontology::TermI].
Args :
object_term
Title : object_term
Usage : $object = $rel->object_term();
Function: Set/get for the object term of this Relationship.
The common convention for ontologies is to express
relationships between terms as triples (subject, predicate,
object).
Returns : The object term [Bio::Ontology::TermI].
Args :
predicate_term
Title : predicate_term
Usage : $type = $rel->predicate_term();
Function: Set/get for the predicate of this relationship.
For a path the predicate (relationship type) is defined as
the greatest common denominator of all predicates
(relationship types) encountered along the path. I.e., if
predicate A is-a predicate B, the greatest common
denominator for a path containing both predicates A and B is B
Returns : The predicate term [Bio::Ontology::TermI].
Args :
ontology
Title : ontology
Usage : $ont = $obj->ontology()
Function: Get the ontology that defined this relationship.
Example :
Returns : an object implementing L<Bio::Ontology::OntologyI>
Args :