NAME

FAST::Bio::SeqIO::fastq - fastq sequence input/output stream

SYNOPSIS

################## pertains to FASTQ parsing only ##################

# grabs the FASTQ parser, specifies the Illumina variant
my $in = FAST::Bio::SeqIO->new(-format    => 'fastq-illumina',
                         -file      => 'mydata.fq');

# simple 'fastq' format defaults to 'sanger' variant
my $out = FAST::Bio::SeqIO->new(-format    => 'fastq',
                          -file      => '>mydata.fq');

# $seq is a FAST::Bio::Seq::Quality object
while (my $seq = $in->next_seq) {
    $out->write_seq($seq);  # convert Illumina 1.3 to Sanger format
}

# for 4x faster parsing, one can do something like this for raw data
use FAST::Bio::Seq::Quality;

# $data is a hash reference containing all arguments to be passed to
# the FAST::Bio::Seq::Quality constructor
while (my $data = $in->next_dataset) {
    # process $data, such as trim, etc
    my $seq = FAST::Bio::Seq::Quality->new(%$data);

    # for now, write_seq only accepts FAST::Bio::Seq::Quality, but may be modified
    # to allow raw hash references for speed
    $out->write_seq($data);
}

DESCRIPTION

This object can transform FAST::Bio::Seq and FAST::Bio::Seq::Quality objects to and from FASTQ flat file databases.

FASTQ is a file format used frequently at the Sanger Centre and in next-gen sequencing to bundle a FASTA sequence and its quality data. A typical FASTQ entry takes the form:

@HCDPQ1D0501
GATTTGGGGTTCAAAGCAGTATCGATCAAATAGTAAATCCATTTGTTCAACTCACAGTTT.....
+HCDPQ1D0501
!''*((((***+))%%%++)(%%%%).1***-+*''))**55CCF>>>>>>CCCCCCC65.....

where:

@ = descriptor, followed by one or more sequence lines
+ = optional descriptor (if present, must match first one), followed by one or
    more qual lines

When writing FASTQ output the redundant descriptor following the '+' is by default left off to save disk space. If needed, one can set the quality_header() flag in order for this to be printed.

FASTQ and FAST::Bio::Seq::Quality mapping

FASTQ files have sequence and quality data on single line or multiple lines, and the quality values are single-byte encoded. Data are mapped very simply to FAST::Bio::Seq::Quality instances:

Data                                        FAST::Bio::Seq::Quality method
------------------------------------------------------------------------
first non-whitespace chars in descriptor    id^
descriptor line                             desc^
sequence lines                              seq
quality                                     qual*
FASTQ variant                               namespace

^ first nonwhitespace chars are id(), everything else after (to end of line)
  is in desc()
* Converted to PHRED quality scores where applicable ('solexa')

FASTQ variants

This parser supports all variants of FASTQ, including Illumina v 1.0 and 1.3:

variant                note
-----------------------------------------------------------
sanger                 original
solexa                 Solexa, Inc. (2004), aka Illumina 1.0
illumina               Illumina 1.3

The variant can be specified by passing by either passing the additional -variant parameter to the constructor:

my $in = FAST::Bio::SeqIO->new(-format    => 'fastq',
                         -variant   => 'solexa',
                         -file      => 'mysol.fq');

or by passing the format and variant together (FAST::Bio::SeqIO will now handle this and convert it accordingly to the proper argument):

my $in = FAST::Bio::SeqIO->new(-format    => 'fastq-solexa',
                         -file      => 'mysol.fq');

Variants can be converted back and forth from one another; however, due to the difference in scaling for solexa quality reads, converting from 'illumina' or 'sanger' FASTQ to solexa is not recommended.

FEEDBACK

Mailing Lists

User feedback is an integral part of the evolution of this and other Bioperl modules. Send your comments and suggestions preferably to one of the Bioperl mailing lists. Your participation is much appreciated.

bioperl-l@bioperl.org                  - General discussion
http://bioperl.org/wiki/Mailing_lists  - About the mailing lists

Support

Please direct usage questions or support issues to the mailing list:

bioperl-l@bioperl.org

rather than to the module maintainer directly. Many experienced and reponsive experts will be able look at the problem and quickly address it. Please include a thorough description of the problem with code and data examples if at all possible.

Reporting Bugs

Report bugs to the Bioperl bug tracking system to help us keep track the bugs and their resolution. Bug reports can be submitted via the web:

https://redmine.open-bio.org/projects/bioperl/

AUTHORS - Chris Fields (taken over from Tony Cox)

Email: cjfields at bioperl dot org

APPENDIX

The rest of the documentation details each of the object methods. Internal methods are usually preceded with a _

FAST::Bio::SeqIO interface methods

next_seq

Title    : next_seq
Usage    : $seq = $stream->next_seq()
Function : returns the next sequence in the stream
Returns  : FAST::Bio::Seq::Quality object
Args     : NONE
Status   : Stable

write_seq

Title    : write_seq
Usage    : $stream->write_seq(@seq)
Function : writes the $seq object into the stream
Returns  : 1 for success and 0 for error
Args     : FAST::Bio::Seq::Quality
Note     : This now conforms to SeqIO spec (module output is same format as
           next_seq)
Status   : Stable

variant

Title   : variant
Usage   : $format  = $obj->variant();
Function: Get and set method for the quality sequence variant.  This is
          important for indicating the encoding/decoding to be used for
          quality data.

          Current values accepted are:
           'sanger'   (orginal FASTQ)
               ASCII encoding from 33-126, PHRED quality score from 0 to 93
           'solexa'   (aka illumina1.0)
               ASCII encoding from 59-104, SOLEXA quality score from -5 to 40
           'illumina' (aka illumina1.3)
               ASCII encoding from 64-104, PHRED quality score from 0 to 40

           (Derived from the MAQ website):
           For 'solexa', scores are converted to PHRED qual scores using:
               $Q = 10 * log(1 + 10 ** (ord($sq) - 64) / 10.0)) / log(10)


Returns : string
Args    : new value, string

Plugin-specific methods

next_dataset

Title    : next_dataset
Usage    : $obj->next_dataset
Function : returns a hash reference containing the parsed data
Returns  : hash reference
Args     : none
Status   : Stable

write_fastq

Title   : write_fastq
Usage   : $stream->write_fastq(@seq)
Function: writes the $seq object into the stream
Returns : 1 for success and 0 for error
Args    : FAST::Bio::Seq::Quality object
Status  : Deprecated (delegates to write_seq)

write_fasta

Title   : write_fasta
Usage   : $stream->write_fasta(@seq)
Function: writes the $seq object into the stream
Returns : 1 for success and 0 for error
Args    : FAST::Bio::Seq object
Note    : This method does not currently delegate to FAST::Bio::SeqIO::fasta
          (maybe it should?).  Not sure whether we should keep this as a
          convenience method.
Status  : Unstable

write_qual

Title   : write_qual
Usage   : $stream->write_qual(@seq)
Function: writes the $seq object into the stream
Returns : 1 for success and 0 for error
Args    : FAST::Bio::Seq::Quality object
Note    : This method does not currently delegate to FAST::Bio::SeqIO::qual
          (maybe it should?).  Not sure whether we should keep this as a
          convenience method.
Status  : Unstable

validate

Title    : validate
Usage    : $obj->validate(0)
Function : flag for format/qual range validation - default is 1, validate
Returns  : Bool (0/1)
Args     : Bool (0/1)
Status   : Stable (may be moved to interface)

quality_header

Title    : quality_header
Usage    : $obj->quality_header
Function : flag for printing quality header - default is 0, no header
Returns  : Bool (0/1)
Args     : Bool (0/1)
Status   : Unstable (name may change dep. on feedback)