IRanges (version 2.6.1)

IRanges-constructor: The IRanges constructor and supporting functions

Description

The IRanges function is a constructor that can be used to create IRanges instances.

solveUserSEW0 and solveUserSEW are utility functions that solve a set of user-supplied start/end/width values.

Usage

## IRanges constructor: IRanges(start=NULL, end=NULL, width=NULL, names=NULL)
## Supporting functions (not for the end user): solveUserSEW0(start=NULL, end=NULL, width=NULL) solveUserSEW(refwidths, start=NA, end=NA, width=NA, rep.refwidths=FALSE, translate.negative.coord=TRUE, allow.nonnarrowing=FALSE)

Arguments

start, end, width
For IRanges and solveUserSEW0: NULL, or vector of integers (eventually with NAs).

For solveUserSEW: vector of integers (eventually with NAs).

names
A character vector or NULL.
refwidths
Vector of non-NA non-negative integers containing the reference widths.
rep.refwidths
TRUE or FALSE. Use of rep.refwidths=TRUE is supported only when refwidths is of length 1.
translate.negative.coord, allow.nonnarrowing
TRUE or FALSE.

IRanges constructor

Return the IRanges object containing the ranges specified by start, end and width. Input falls into one of two categories:
Category 1
start, end and width are numeric vectors (or NULLs). If necessary they are recycled to the length of the longest (NULL arguments are filled with NAs). After this recycling, each row in the 3-column matrix obtained by binding those 3 vectors together is "solved" i.e. NAs are treated as unknown in the equation end = start + width - 1. Finally, the solved matrix is returned as an IRanges instance.
Category 2
The start argument is a logical vector or logical Rle object and IRanges(start) produces the same result as as(start, "IRanges"). Note that, in that case, the returned IRanges instance is guaranteed to be normal.
Note that the names argument is never recycled (to remain consistent with what `names<-` does on standard vectors).

Supporting functions

solveUserSEW0(start=NULL, end=NULL, width=NULL):
solveUserSEW(refwidths, start=NA, end=NA, width=NA, rep.refwidths=FALSE, translate.negative.coord=TRUE, allow.nonnarrowing=FALSE): Use of rep.refwidths=TRUE is supported only when refwidths is of length 1. If rep.refwidths=FALSE (the default) then start, end and width are recycled to the length of refwidths (it's an error if one of them is longer than refwidths, or is of zero length while refwidths is not). If rep.refwidths=TRUE then refwidths is first replicated L times where L is the length of the longest of start, end and width. After this replication, start, end and width are recycled to the new length of refwidths (L) (it's an error if one of them is of zero length while L is != 0). From now, refwidths, start, end and width are integer vectors of equal lengths. Each row in the 3-column matrix obtained by binding those 3 vectors together must contain at least one NA (otherwise an error is returned). Then each row is "solved" i.e. the 2 following transformations are performed (i is the indice of the row): (1) if translate.negative.coord is TRUE then a negative value of start[i] or end[i] is considered to be a -refwidths[i]-based coordinate so refwidths[i]+1 is added to it to make it 1-based; (2) the NAs in the row are treated as unknowns which values are deduced from the known values in the row and from refwidths[i]. The exact rules for (2) are the following. Rule (2a): if the row contains at least 2 NAs, then width[i] must be one of them (otherwise an error is returned), and if start[i] is one of them it is replaced by 1, and if end[i] is one of them it is replaced by refwidths[i], and finally width[i] is replaced by end[i] - start[i] + 1. Rule (2b): if the row contains only 1 NA, then it is replaced by the solution of the width[i] == end[i] - start[i] + 1 equation. Finally, the set of solved rows is returned as an IRanges object of the same length as refwidths (after replication if rep.refwidths=TRUE). Note that an error is raised if either (1) the set of user-supplied start/end/width values is invalid or (2) allow.nonnarrowing is FALSE and the ranges represented by the solved start/end/width values are not narrowing the ranges represented by the user-supplied start/end/width values.

See Also

IRanges-class, narrow

Examples

Run this code
  ## ---------------------------------------------------------------------
  ## A. USING THE IRanges() CONSTRUCTOR
  ## ---------------------------------------------------------------------
  IRanges(start=11, end=rep.int(20, 5))
  IRanges(start=11, width=rep.int(20, 5))
  IRanges(-2, 20)  # only one range
  IRanges(start=c(2, 0, NA), end=c(NA, NA, 14), width=11:0)
  IRanges()  # IRanges instance of length zero
  IRanges(names=character())

  ## With logical input:
  x <- IRanges(c(FALSE, TRUE, TRUE, FALSE, TRUE))  # logical vector input
  isNormal(x)  # TRUE
  x <- IRanges(Rle(1:30) %% 5 <= 2)  # logical Rle input
  isNormal(x)  # TRUE

  ## ---------------------------------------------------------------------
  ## B. USING solveUserSEW()
  ## ---------------------------------------------------------------------
  refwidths <- c(5:3, 6:7)
  refwidths

  solveUserSEW(refwidths)
  solveUserSEW(refwidths, start=4)
  solveUserSEW(refwidths, end=3, width=2)
  solveUserSEW(refwidths, start=-3)
  solveUserSEW(refwidths, start=-3, width=2)
  solveUserSEW(refwidths, end=-4)

  ## The start/end/width arguments are recycled:
  solveUserSEW(refwidths, start=c(3, -4, NA), end=c(-2, NA))

  ## Using 'rep.refwidths=TRUE':
  solveUserSEW(10, start=-(1:6), rep.refwidths=TRUE)
  solveUserSEW(10, end=-(1:6), width=3, rep.refwidths=TRUE)

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