Learn about the Browser: Difference between revisions

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** Some important tools are already compiled (even for windows!) [http://hgdownload.cse.ucsc.edu/admin/exe/ from here]
** Some important tools are already compiled (even for windows!) [http://hgdownload.cse.ucsc.edu/admin/exe/ from here]
** [http://genome.ucsc.edu/admin/jk-install.html Compile all tools (includes the browser webserver)] yourself
** [http://genome.ucsc.edu/admin/jk-install.html Compile all tools (includes the browser webserver)] yourself
** The best starting point is the main zipfile: http://hgdownload.cse.ucsc.edu/admin/jksrc.zip
** You need to set some [[Build_Environment_Variables|environment variables]] before you start the compilation
** You need to set some [[Build_Environment_Variables|environment variables]] before you start the compilation
** Walkthroughs for...
** Walkthroughs for...

Revision as of 22:35, 17 May 2010

This list is sorted by increasing technical complexity: the first steps require only a webbrowser, the last ones a Linux webserver.

Use the browser website

Download the data of the genome browser (sequences and annotations)

  • Be aware that internal coordinates (not website) are 0-based!
  • Unlike Gbrowse and Ensembl, UCSC is storing the data partially in SQL (coordiantes, outline of x-y-plots) and partially in flat text files (sequences, alignments, details of x-y-plots)
  • Table Browser: The easiest way to access data (you don't have to care whether data is stored in MySQL or in textfiles):
  • SQL-stored data (FAQ):
  • Flat-file data: Download from the ftp server (stored in /gbdb on browser servers)

Install a copy of the browser on your own machine (Unix or Mac)

Compile the UCSC source tree and analyze genomes yourself

Modify your own copy of the browser

Making Of: How the UCSC genome annotations are created

Developing with the UCSC API

Statistics, overviews