Team:NYU/Programming

From 2010.igem.org

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(About this Page)
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=====About this Page=====
=====About this Page=====
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* Competent programming skills are quickly becoming a necessity for effectively working in biology. Because most of our team members had never had exposure to a programming environment, we decided to use the obstacles presented in our iGEM experiments as cause for learning the Perl programming language to produce scripts that could do routine iGEM labors for us. Here are some examples:
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* Competent programming skills are quickly becoming a necessity for working in biology. Because most of our team members had never had exposure to a programming environment, we decided to use the obstacles presented in our iGEM experiments as cause for learning the Perl programming language and produced some simple scripts that could do routine iGEM labors for us. Here are some examples:
=====Biobricking Primers=====
=====Biobricking Primers=====

Revision as of 02:09, 11 October 2010



About this Page
  • Competent programming skills are quickly becoming a necessity for working in biology. Because most of our team members had never had exposure to a programming environment, we decided to use the obstacles presented in our iGEM experiments as cause for learning the Perl programming language and produced some simple scripts that could do routine iGEM labors for us. Here are some examples:
Biobricking Primers
  • This script allows the user to input a DNA sequence and outputs the primers necessary for biobricking that sequence via PCR. The script calculates Tm but does not (yet) consider primer dimers.

Biobricking Primers Source

Overlap Oligo Maker
  • Some very fast and efficient DNA assembly methods require parts to overlap in their sequences. This script will take two DNA sequences and output the oligos (and their Tms) one would need to PCR constructs with overlapping ends.

Overlap Oligos Source