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NAMEBio::Phylo::Unparsers::Nhx - Serializer used by Bio::Phylo::IO, no serviceable parts insideDESCRIPTIONThis module turns a tree object into a New Hampshire eXtended-formatted (parenthetical) tree description. It is called by the Bio::Phylo::IO facade, don't call it directly. You can pass the following additional arguments to the unparse call:# by default, names for tips are derived from $node->get_name, if # 'internal' is specified, uses $node->get_internal_name, if 'taxon' # uses $node->get_taxon->get_name, if 'taxon_internal' uses # $node->get_taxon->get_internal_name, if $key, uses $node->get_generic($key) -tipnames => one of (internal|taxon|taxon_internal|$key) # for things like a translate table in nexus, or to specify truncated # 10-character names, you can pass a translate mapping as a hashref. # to generate the translated names, the strings obtained following the # -tipnames rules are used. -translate => { Homo_sapiens => 1, Pan_paniscus => 2 } # if set, appends labels to internal nodes (names obtained from the same # source as specified by '-tipnames') -nodelabels => 1 # specifies a branch length sprintf number formatting template, default is %f -blformat => '%e' In addition, you can influence what key/value pairs are inserted into the NHX "hot comments" in two ways. The first way (and the way that is least likely to cause unintentional mishaps) is by attaching a Meta annotation to a node. This annotation has to be associated with the NHX namespace. Here is an example: use Bio::Phylo::Util::CONSTANT ':classnames'; # ...other things happening... $node->set_namespaces( 'nhx' => _NS_NHX_ ); $node->set_meta_object( 'nhx:foo' => 'bar' ); # which results in: [&&NHX:foo=bar] The other way is by using the set/get generic methods, e.g.: $node->set_generic( 'foo' => 'bar'); However, this is riskier because everything you attach to an object using these methods will be inserted into the NHX, including references (which won't serialize well). SEE ALSOThere is a mailing list at <https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/bio-phylo> for any user or developer questions and discussions.
CITATIONIf you use Bio::Phylo in published research, please cite it:Rutger A Vos, Jason Caravas, Klaas Hartmann, Mark A Jensen and Chase Miller, 2011. Bio::Phylo - phyloinformatic analysis using Perl. BMC Bioinformatics 12:63. <http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2105-12-63>
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