Difference between revisions of "Exercise 5.4D"
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(New page: #!/usr/bin/perl -w use strict; #Damian Almiron Return to Week 2 <br> Exercise 5.3 in <i>Beginning Perl for Bioinformatics</i></b> <pre> #Ex 5-4 #Pseudocode: #Write program to c...) |
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− | Exercise 5. | + | Exercise 5.4 in <i>Beginning Perl for Bioinformatics</i></b> |
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Revision as of 11:48, 18 December 2009
Return to Week 2
Exercise 5.4 in Beginning Perl for Bioinformatics
#Ex 5-4 #Pseudocode: #Write program to calculate the reverse complement of a string of DNA. #First, get DNA sequence from user input. #Second, calculate reverse complement using substr #Print result #my variables my $DNA = 0; my $reversecomplement = 0; my $base = 0; my $position = 0; #Ask the user for a string of DNA (change it to upper) print "Please input a string of DNA to get its reverse complement:\n\n"; $DNA = <STDIN>; chomp $DNA; #Calculate reverse complement (refer to pg. 80 and what if it is not uppercase) for ($position = 0 ; $position < length $DNA ; ++$position){ $base = substr($dna, $position, 1); if ( $base eq 'T' ) { $reversecomplement = $reverse_dna.'A'; } elsif ( $base eq 'A' ) { $reversecomplement = $reverse_dna.'T'; } elsif ( $base eq 'G' ) { $reversecomplement = $reverse_dna.'C'; } elsif ( $base eq 'C' ) { $reverse_dna = $reverse_dna.'G'; } } #Strip $reverse_dna of it's first character (why??????) $reverse_dna =~ s/^0*//; #Print result print "The corresponding reverse complement sequence is: $reverse_dna.\n\n"; #The End exit;