.NET Bio

.NET Bio is an open source bioinformatics and genomics library created to enable simple loading, saving and analysis of biological data. It was designed for .NET Standard 2.0 and was part of the Microsoft Biology Initiative in the eScience division.

.NET Bio
Original author(s)Microsoft Research
Developer(s)Outercurve Foundation
Repositorygithub.com/dotnetbio/bio
Written inC#
Operating systemLinux, macOS, Windows
Platform.NET Framework, Mono
TypeBioinformatics and genomics library
LicenseApache License 2.0
Websiteweb.archive.org/web/20130522040708/http://research.microsoft.com/en-US/projects/bio/mbf.aspx

History

.NET Bio was originally built and released by Microsoft Research under the name Microsoft Biology Foundation (MBF) and was later repackaged and released by the Outercurve Foundation[1] as a fully public and open source project under the Apache License 2.0.[2]

Capabilities

The library consists of a set of object-oriented classes written in C# to perform common bioinformatic tasks such as:

  1. Read and write standard alignment and sequence-oriented data files such as FASTA and GenBank.
  2. Access online web services such as NCBI BLAST to search known databases for sequence fragments.
  3. Algorithms for local and global alignments.
  4. Algorithms for sequence assembly, including a parallel DeNovo assembler implementation.[3]

Even though the library itself is written in C#, it may be used from any .NET compatible language and has samples of various usages including from IronPython scripting.[4]

See also

References

  1. "New life for the Open Source Initiative". zdnet.com.
  2. "MBF Becomes .NET Bio". 2011-10-18.
  3. Thareja Gaurav; Vivek Kumar; Mike Zyskowski; Simon Mercer; Bob Davidson (2011). "PadeNA: A parallel de novo assembler". Proceedings of the International Conference on Bioinformatics Models, Methods and Algorithms. pp. 196–203. doi:10.5220/0003164301960203. ISBN 978-989-8425-36-2. Archived from the original on 2020-10-03. Retrieved 2013-08-14.
  4. "Finding and Decoding Malicious Powershell Scripts". Kroll.
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