ROSALIND | Problems | Locations Rosalind is a platform for learning bioinformatics and programming through problem solving Take a tour to get the hang of how Rosalind works If you don't know anything about programming, you can start at the Python Village
About - Rosalind Rosalind offers an array of intellectually stimulating problems that grow in biological and computational complexity; each problem is checked automatically, so that the only resource required to learn bioinformatics is an internet connection
Problems - Rosalind Rosalind is a platform for learning bioinformatics and programming through problem solving Take a tour to get the hang of how Rosalind works
FAQ - Rosalind Every Rosalind problem contains an optional biological introduction detailing a practical issue of interest, followed by an introduction to a computational problem that is used to model this biological application
Problems - Rosalind Rosalind is a platform for learning bioinformatics and programming through problem solving Take a tour to get the hang of how Rosalind works Last win: jc83 vs “Variables and Some Arithmetic” , just now
Glossary | RNA transcription - Rosalind RNA transcription defines the process by which DNA is converted into RNA In eukaryotes, RNA transcription takes place in the nucleus An enzyme called RNA polymerase (RNAP) facilitates transcription by traversing one strand of DNA (in the 3'-5' direction), called the template strand
Problems | Topics - Rosalind Superimposing the symbols of one string over those of another (with gap symbols inserted into the strings) to represent insertions, deletions, and substitutions between the strings
Transcribing DNA into RNA - Rosalind In “Counting DNA Nucleotides”, we described the primary structure of a nucleic acid as a polymer of nucleotide units, and we mentioned that the omnipresent nucleic acid DNA is composed of a varied sequence of four bases Yet a second nucleic acid exists alongside DNA in the chromatin; this molecule, which possesses a different sugar called ribose, came to be known as ribose nucleic acid
ROSALIND | Finding a Shared Motif Searching Through the Haystack In “Finding a Motif in DNA”, we searched a given genetic string for a motif; however, this problem assumed that we know the motif in advance In practice, biologists often do not know exactly what they are looking for Rather, they must hunt through several different genomes at the same time to identify regions of similarity that may indicate genes shared by