comparison galaxy-conf/ValueDistribution.xml @ 20:9d56b5b85740 draft

Reuploaded to see if tools get loaded correctly this time.
author timpalpant
date Fri, 15 Jun 2012 15:10:26 -0400
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children b43c420a6135
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19:8ad390e82b92 20:9d56b5b85740
1 <tool id="WigValueDistribution" name="Compute the value distribution" version="1.1.0">
2 <description>of a (Big)Wig file</description>
3 <command interpreter="sh">galaxyToolRunner.sh wigmath.ValueDistribution -i $input
4 #if str( $min ) != ''
5 --min $min
6 #end if
7
8 #if str( $max ) != ''
9 --max $max
10 #end if
11
12 -n $bins -o $output
13 </command>
14 <inputs>
15 <param format="bigwig,wig" name="input" type="data" label="(Big)Wig file" />
16 <param name="min" type="float" optional="true" label="Minimum bin value (optional)" />
17 <param name="max" type="float" optional="true" label="Maximum bin value (optional)" />
18 <param name="bins" type="integer" value="40" label="Number of bins" />
19 </inputs>
20 <outputs>
21 <data format="txt" name="output" />
22 </outputs>
23
24 <help>
25
26 This tool computes a histogram of the values in a Wig file, as well as the moments of the distribution.
27
28 -----
29
30 **Syntax**
31
32 - **Input data** is the genomic data used to compute the histogram.
33 - **Minimum bin value** is the smallest bin. If unset, it is equal to the minimum value in the input data
34 - **Maximum bin value** is the largest bin. If unset, it is equal to the maximum value in the input data
35 - **Number of bins** is the number of bins to use. The bin size will be equal to (max - min) / (# bins).
36
37 -----
38
39 **Output**
40
41 The output is in 2-column tabular format, where the first column represents the lower edge of a bin inteval and the second column represents the number of values that fell in that bin. For example if the **minimum bin value** is 0, the **maximum bin value** is 0.3, and the **number of bins** is 3, then the following output might be produced ::
42
43 bin count
44 &lt;0 3
45 0 1
46 0.1 10
47 0.2 4
48 &gt;0.3 12
49
50 where there were 3 values in (-inf, 0), 1 value in [0, 0.1), 10 values in [0.1, 0.2), 4 values in [0.2, 0.3), and 12 values in [0.3, inf).
51
52 </help>
53 </tool>