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  • Kennels
    replied
    If you are familiar with command line terminal, you could try grep in the command line:

    Code:
    grep "yoursequence" yourfastafile
    Using the '-B 1' option will allow you to grab the header for this sequence too:

    Code:
    grep -B 1 "yoursequence" yourfastafile
    if you have a text file with each sequence on each line you can use fgrep:

    Code:
    fgrep -B 1 -f filewithlistofsequences yourfastafile
    These will produce an output to the screen if the sequence exists (or you could redirect to another file using '> output.txt'). Otherwise there will be no output. But the search will only be for exact matches, and will miss sequences with line breaks in between.
    Last edited by Kennels; 02-26-2012, 09:32 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • colindaven
    replied
    Another, perhaps more user friendly approach for non bioinformaticians might be
    Artemis from the Sanger Institute.

    A good text editor, i.e. Notepad++ on Windows, might do the trick too, but watch out for
    line breaks.

    Leave a comment:


  • arvid
    replied
    Legacy BLAST formatdb for nucleotide FASTA files:
    Code:
    formatdb -p F -i file.fasta
    To search:
    Code:
    blastall -p blastn -d file.fasta -i query.fasta
    Execute "formatdb --help" and "blastall --help" to see all options.

    Leave a comment:


  • ashkot
    replied
    Hi there,
    I did run formatdb on my FASTA file but i am getting an error stating index file not found.

    Do you know the exact syntax for formatdb to convert a .fasta file into a BLAST able .fasta database file.

    Thanks in advance.
    Ashwin

    Leave a comment:


  • arvid
    replied
    If you do a simple text search with a text editor, you might miss it since the file contains linebreaks.

    I'd simply make a BLAST database out of the FASTA file and use BLAST to find the matching position.

    Leave a comment:


  • ashkot
    replied
    Hi,
    I wanted to search for a sequence in a FASTA file, for e.g the sequence could be

    GGTTCCGCTTTCCACTGCTGCCGCCAGTCGGCCTGAGATGCACTGGCCTCGGCCTCAGAGGAGGCAGTCGCTGACACCTGGCTCCAGGTCCTGGAATCCGGAGGGGCCTCTGGGCCACCGG

    OR

    GGTTCCGCTTTCCACTGCTGCCGCCAGTCGGCCTGAGATGCACTGGCCTCGGCCTCAGAGTAGGCAGTCGCTGACACCTGGCTCCAGGTCCTGGAATCCGGAGGGGCCTCTGGGCCACCGG

    If the FASTA was viewable, then i could do a find for confirmation, i.e. to confirm that the searching code is working fine.

    Does the program FASTA search for a sequence within a FASTA file.

    Ashwin

    Leave a comment:


  • kmcarr
    replied
    Ashwin,

    FASTA files are simply plain text files; they could be opened with any text editor. What do you wish to do with these files? There isn't really much to "look" at in a FASTA file, it's just a long string of DNA sequence (or RNA or protein).

    Leave a comment:


  • ashkot
    started a topic FASTA Viewer

    FASTA Viewer

    Hi all,
    I have several large FASTA files and i wanted to know if there is a FASTA visualizer for Windows or Linux?

    Thanks in advance.

    Regards,
    Ashwin

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