Name: pride-inspector
Owner: PRIDE-Toolsuite
Description: PRIDE Inspector is a Java desktop application to visualise and Quality Assessment on Mass Spectrometry data and Proteomics
Created: 2014-09-03 09:11:28.0
Updated: 2017-05-23 02:19:37.0
Pushed: 2016-12-14 21:46:09.0
Size: 23472
Language: Java
GitHub Committers
User | Most Recent Commit | # Commits |
---|---|---|
Yasset Perez-Riverol | 2018-03-13 15:28:01.0 | 118 |
Enes Poyraz | 2016-02-11 16:07:49.0 | 3 |
Julian Uszkoreit | 2016-01-08 08:34:00.0 | 17 |
Rui Wang | 2015-02-26 11:34:39.0 | 52 |
Tobias Ternent | 2016-04-11 09:07:44.0 | 2 |
Marc Vaudel | 2016-12-07 14:10:03.0 | 4 |
Other Committers
User | Most Recent Commit | # Commits |
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PRIDE Inspector is a desktop application to visualise and perform first quality assessment on Mass Spectrometry data.
pride-inspector is a PRIDE API licensed under Apache License 2.0.
Perez-Riverol, Yasset, Qing-Wei Xu, Rui Wang, Julian Uszkoreit, Johannes Griss, Aniel Sanchez, Florian Reisinger et al. “PRIDE Inspector Toolsuite: Moving Toward a Universal Visualization Tool for Proteomics Data Standard Formats and Quality Assessment of ProteomeXchange Datasets.” Molecular & Cellular Proteomics 15, no. 1 (2016): 305-317 PDF File Pubmed Record Wang, R., Fabregat, A., Ríos, D., Ovelleiro, D., Foster, J. M., Côté, R. G., … & Vizcaíno, J. A. (2012). PRIDE Inspector: a tool to visualize and validate MS proteomics data. Nature biotechnology, 30(2), 135-137. PDF File, Pubmed Record
mzML 1.1 PRIDE XML 2.1 mzIdentML 1.1.0 Peak Files (mgf, ms2, pkl, dta, mzData, mzXML, apl)
Note: the tool is still evolving, we are committed to expand the tool and add more features such as protein inference and metadata checklist.
Click here to launch directly the latest PRIDE Inspector.
Please note that Mac OS 10.8 (Mountain Lion) users or users of the Google Chrome browser, may have to execute additional steps. Please see FAQ section below if in doubt.
You can get the latest PRIDE Inspector from our Download Section, and download pride-inspector-X.Y.zip (where X and Y represent the version of the software). Unzipping the file, creates the following directory structure:
pride-inspector-X.Y
pride-inspector-X.Y.jar
log
lib
examples
config
To start the software, simply double-click the file named pride-inspector-X.Y.jar. If this fails, try to download and install Java 1.7 or above, as explained in the previous section. (The program can also be started from the command line using the following command: java -jar pride-inspector-X.Y.jar.)
The zip file contains also an examples folder with 2 sample files: one in mzML format (mzml-example.mzML) and the other in PRIDE xml format (pride-example.xml) so you can upload them in pride inspector and try the application. There is and additional folder, config, that contains a file called config.props where you can modify the amount of memory assigned to your application (only change if you are trying to view files and is causing the software crash because of a “Out of memory…” exception). The additional 2 directories, lib and log, contain all the java libraries necessary for the application to run and some debugging information if the application crashes.
PRIDE Inspector can be used in Maven projects, you can include the following snippets in your Maven pom file.
pendency>
groupId>uk.ac.ebi.pride.toolsuite</groupId>
artifactId>pride-inspector</artifactId>
version>x.x.x</version>
ependency>
- EBI repo -->
pository>
<id>nexus-ebi-repo</id>
<url>http://www.ebi.ac.uk/intact/maven/nexus/content/repositories/ebi-repo</url>
epository>
- EBI SNAPSHOT repo -->
apshotRepository>
<id>nexus-ebi-repo-snapshots</id>
<url>http://www.ebi.ac.uk/intact/maven/nexus/content/repositories/ebi-repo-snapshots</url>
napshotRepository>
Note: you need to change the version number to the latest version.
For developers, the latest source code is available from our SVN repository.
If a user downloads the PRIDE Inspector software onto Mac OS X 10.8, they will see a scary warning:
“PRIDE Inspecor can?t be opened because it is from an unidentified developer”
1- Solution 1: To override your security settings and open the app anyway:
- In the Finder, locate the app you want to open. Don?t use Launchpad to do this. Launchpad doesn?t allow you to access the shortcut menu.
- Press the Control key, then click the app icon.
- Choose Open from the shortcut menu.
- Click Open.
The app is saved as an exception to your security settings, and you will be able to open it in the future by double-clicking it, just like any registered app.
2- Solution 2: Permanet solution
To run unsigned software you need to go into Mac OS X Preferences>Security & Privacy>General and change Allow applications downloaded from Mac App store and identified developers to Anywhere:
If you have questions or need additional help, please contact the PRIDE Helpdesk at the EBI: pride-support at ebi.ac.uk (replace at with @).
Please send us your feedback, including error reports, improvement suggestions, new feature requests and any other things you might want to suggest to the PRIDE team.
Protein View
Peptide View
Spectrum View
Chart View
Metadata View
Quatification View
Supported by:
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