fids_to_subsystems

fids in subsystems normally have somewhat more reliable assigned functions than those not in subsystems. Hence, it is common to ask "Is this protein-encoding gene included in any subsystems?" fids_to_subsystems can be used to see which subsystems contain a fid (or, you can submit as input a set of fids and get the subsystems for each).

Example:

fids_to_subsystems [arguments] < input > output

The standard input should be a tab-separated table (i.e., each line is a tab-separated set of fields). Normally, the last field in each line would contain the identifer. If another column contains the identifier use

-c N

where N is the column (from 1) that contains the subsystem.

This is a pipe command. The input is taken from the standard input, and the output is to the standard output.

Documentation for underlying call

This script is a wrapper for the CDMI-API call fids_to_subsystems. It is documented as follows:

$return = $obj->fids_to_subsystems($fids)
Parameter and return types
$fids is a fids
$return is a reference to a hash where the key is a fid and the value is a subsystems
fids is a reference to a list where each element is a fid
fid is a string
subsystems is a reference to a list where each element is a subsystem
subsystem is a string

Command-Line Options

-c Column

This is used only if the column containing the subsystem is not the last column.

-i InputFile [ use InputFile, rather than stdin ]

Output Format

The standard output is a tab-delimited file. It consists of the input file with extra columns added.

Input lines that cannot be extended are written to stderr.