Netiquette · Download · News · Gallery · Homepage · DSSR Manual · G-quadruplexes · DSSR-Jmol · DSSR-PyMOL · DSSR Licensing · Video Overview· RNA Covers

Welcome > Feature requests

JSON or similar machine-readable output for 3DNA

(1/1)

jms89:
Hello, it would be great to have a machine-readable output for 3DNA and indeed all the software tools in the 3DNA suite. If such an option were present, it would also be great to be able to suppress other output files.

Currently, it's very annoying to parse the 3DNA ouput files, and slight changes in the ouput format from version 2.1 to 2.3 may break scripts to do so. A machine readable format would solve this and give 3DNA a big advantage over competitors in my mind.

xiangjun:
Hi,

Thanks for your request for a machine-readable output for 3DNA v2.x. I fully understand your point. Indeed, a JSON output also allows me freedom to change the human-readable file as necessary, as illustrated in DSSR.

Now for the 3DNA 2.x series, the current (stable) version is v2.3. Except for a new section on "simple" parameters, v2.3 has the same output format as v2.1. So it should not take much effort to revise your parser script for v2.3. Moreover, the v2.3-2016sept06 release also includes the C source code so users can make direct changes as they see fit. See my blogpost "3DNA C source code is available". At this stage, I'd decided to support 3DNA 2.3 in "maintenance" mode. No more new features, but I'd still fix any identified bugs.

As I mentioned in several other occasions, DSSR is a representative of what'd constitute 3DNA v3, which has a completely new code base. DSSR has already incorporated find_pair, some features of analyze, frame_mol, rotate_mol, and blocview etc. In due time, I will incorporate all key features of analyze into DSSR. I welcome users' comments in this endeavor. Do you have anything specific in 3DNA 2.3 you'd like a JSON output?

Best regards,

Xiang-Jun

Navigation

[0] Message Index

Created and maintained by Dr. Xiang-Jun Lu [律祥俊] (xiangjun@x3dna.org)
The Bussemaker Laboratory at the Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia University.

Go to full version