Bioconductor

Bioconductor
Stable release
3.4 / 18 October 2016 (2016-10-18)
Operating system Linux, Mac OS X, Windows
Platform R programming language
Type Bioinformatics
License Artistic License 2.0
Website www.bioconductor.org

Bioconductor is a free, open source and open development software project for the analysis and comprehension of genomic data generated by wet lab experiments in molecular biology.

Bioconductor is based primarily on the statistical R programming language, but does contain contributions in other programming languages. It has two releases each year that follow the semiannual releases of R. At any one time there is a release version, which corresponds to the released version of R, and a development version, which corresponds to the development version of R. Most users will find the release version appropriate for their needs. In addition there are a large number of genome annotation packages available that are mainly, but not solely, oriented towards different types of microarrays.

The project was started in the Fall of 2001 and is overseen by the Bioconductor core team, based primarily at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, with other members coming from international institutions.

Packages

Most Bioconductor components are distributed as R packages, which are add-on modules for R. Initially most of the Bioconductor software packages focused on the analysis of single channel Affymetrix and two or more channel cDNA/Oligo microarrays. As the project has matured, the functional scope of the software packages broadened to include the analysis of all types of genomic data, such as SAGE, sequence, or SNP data.

Goals

The broad goals of the projects are to:

Main features

Milestones

Version Release Date Package Count Dependency
1.0 1 May 2001 15 R 1.5
1.1 19 Nov 2002 20 R 1.6
1.2 29 May 2003 30 R 1.7
1.3 30 Oct 2003 49 R 1.8
1.4 17 May 2004 81 R 1.9
1.5 25 Oct 2004 100 R 2.0
1.6 18 May 2005 123 R 2.1
1.7 14 Oct 2005 141 R 2.2
1.8 27 Apr 2006 172 R 2.3
1.9 4 Oct 2006 188 R 2.4
2.0 26 Apr 2007 214 R 2.5
2.1 8 Oct 2007 233 R 2.6
2.2 1 May 2008 260 R 2.7
2.3 22 Oct 2008 294 R 2.8
2.4 21 Apr 2009 320 R 2.9
2.5 28 Oct 2009 352 R 2.10
2.6 23 Apr 2010 389 R 2.11
2.7 18 Oct 2010 418 R 2.12
2.8 14 Apr 2011 466 R 2.13
2.9 1 Nov 2011 517 R 2.14
2.10 2 Apr 2012 554 R 2.15
2.11 3 Oct 2012 610 R 2.15
2.12 4 Apr 2013 671 R 3.0
2.13 15 Oct 2013 749 R 3.0
2.14 14 Apr 2014 824 R 3.1
3.0 14 Oct 2014 934 R 3.1
3.1 17 Apr 2015 1024 R 3.2
3.2 14 Oct 2015 1104 R 3.2
3.3 4 May 2016 1211 R 3.3
3.4 18 Oct 2016 1296 R 3.3

Resources

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/3/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.