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BioPerl

BioPerl
BioPerlLogo.png
Initial release 11 June 2002 (2002-06-11)
Stable release
1.6.924 / 10 July 2014; 3 years ago (2014-07-10)
Preview release
nightly builds
Repository github.com/bioperl/bioperl-live.git
Development status Active
Written in Perl
Platform Cross-platform
Type Bioinformatics
License Artistic License and GPL
Website bioperl.org

BioPerl is a collection of Perl modules that facilitate the development of Perl scripts for bioinformatics applications. It has played an integral role in the Human Genome Project.

BioPerl is an active open source software project supported by the Open Bioinformatics Foundation. The first set of Perl codes of Bioperl was created by Tim Hubbard and Jong Bhak at MRC Centre Cambridge where the first genome sequencing was carried out by Fred Sanger. MRC Centre was one of the hubs and birth places of modern bioinformatics as it had large amount of DNA sequences and 3D protein structures. The name Bioperl was coined jointly by Jong Bhak and Steve Brenner in a small room of Centre for Protein Engineering (CPE) of MRC Centre where Alan Fersht was the director. In that small room, Cyrus Chothia and Tim Hubbard were working with some of their Ph.D. students and colleagues. Tim Hubbard is an expert Perl programmer and he was using th_lib.pl that contained many useful Perl subroutines for bioinformatics. Jong Bhak, being the first Ph.D. student of Tim Hubbard created jong_lib.pl. Jong merged the two Perl subroutine libraries into Bio.pl. One day in 1995, Steve Brenner, a Ph.D. student of Cyrus Chothia visited the room and started to discuss what they would call the perl library after some lengthy (a few months) debate on whether Perl is superior to C for bioinformatics as Steve Brenner had his own C library for bioinformatics. The two Ph.D. students named the net Perl library for biology Bioperl after going through names such as protein perl, protperl, PerlBio, and so on. Steve Brenner organized a Bioperl session in 1995 at ISMB Cambridge although it did not really happen. Bioperl had some users in coming months including Georg Fuellen who organized a training course in Germany. Georg's colleagues and students extended the Bioperl much and this was joined later by other people such as Steve Chervitz who was actively developing Perl codes for his yeast genome DB. The major expansion came when another Cambridge student Ewan Birney joined the wagon after another lengthy debate on if Perl was superior to C for bioinformatics and Ewan and many other people were very active in developing Bioperl.


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