Provided by: squizz_0.99d+dfsg-3_amd64 bug

NAME

       squizz - Sequence format checker" 4

SYNOPSIS

       squizz [-AShlnsv] [-c format] [-f format] file

OPTIONS

       Following command line options are allowed:

       -A  Restrict detection/verification to alignment formats (conflict with -S option).

       -S  Restrict detection/verification to sequence formats (conflict with -A option).

       -c format
           Convert detected sequence/alignment into format. This option implies strict alignment
           checking.

       -f format
           Assume input format is format. Do not try to detect the format, just verify that the
           given one is correct.

       -h  Display help message and exit.

       -l  List all supported formats.

       -n  Count and report detected entries. This option is only available when the detection is
           restricted to a single type (with -A or -S options) and strict checks (without -s
           option) are enabled.

       -s  Disable strict format checks (enabled by default).

       -v  Display version information and exit.

DESCRIPTION

       squizz is a sequence format file checker, but it has some conversion capabilities too.

       squizz can detect the most common sequence and alignment formats :

       * CODATA, EMBL, FASTA, GCG, GDE, GENBANK, IG, NBRF (pir), RAW, and SWISSPROT.

       * CLUSTAL, FASTA, MSF, NEXUS, PHYLIP (interleaved and sequential) and STOCKHOLM.

       squizz can do some conversions too, if the format the input format is supported. Only 3
       types are available : sequence to sequence, alignment to alignment, and alignment to
       sequence (the last one, sequence to alignment, require multiple alignments algorithms and
       cannot be handled with formatting tools).

       Strict format checks validate the previously detected objects, by making some sanity
       checks:

       - sequence strings must exists.
       - alignment is made of more than one sequence.
       - alignment sequence strings must have the same length.
       - alignment sequence names must exists, and be unique.

SEE ALSO

       seqfmt(5), alifmt(5)

AUTHOR

       Nicolas Joly (njoly@pasteur.fr), Institut Pasteur.