Preface

 

How much intelligence does one need to sneak upon lettuce?

 
 --Solomon Short

This "book" is actually the result of an exercise in self-defense. It contains texts from several years of help files, mails, postings, questions, anwers etc.pp concerning MIRA and assembly projects one can do with it.

I never really intended to push MIRA. It started out as a PhD thesis and I subsequently continued development when I needed something to be done which other programs couldn't do at the time. But MIRA has always been available as binary on the Internet since 1999 ... and as Open Source since 2007. Somehow, MIRA seems to have caught the attention of more than just a few specialised sequencing labs and over the years I've seen an ever growing number of mails in my inbox and on the MIRA mailing list. Both from people having been "since ever" in the sequencing business as well as from labs or people just getting their feet wet in the area.

The help files -- and through them this book -- sort of reflect this development. Most of the chapters[1] contain both very specialised topics as well as step-by-step walk-throughs intended to help people to get their assembly projects going. Some parts of the documentation are written in a decidedly non-scientific way. Please excuse, time for rewriting mails somewhat lacking, some texts were re-used almost verbatim.

Nothing is perfect, and both MIRA and this documentation are far from it. If you spot an error either in MIRA or the docs, feel free to report it. Or, even better, correct it if you can. At least with the help files it should be easy, they're just text files.

I hope that MIRA will be as useful to you as it has been to me. Have a lot of fun with it.

Rheinfelden, Summer 2011

Bastien Chevreux



[1] Avid readers of David Gerrold will certainly recognise the quotes from his books at the beginning of each chapter