© Copyright 1986-2002 by The University of Washington. Written by Christopher Meacham and Joseph Felsenstein. Permission is granted to copy this document provided that no fee is charged for it and that this copyright notice is not removed.
Note: Factor is an Old Style program. This means that it takes some of its options information, notably the Ancestral states and Factors options from the input file rather than from separate files of their own as the New Style programs in this version of PHYLIP do. |
Programmed by C. Meacham, Botany, Univ. of Georgia, Athens, Georgia .ce (current address: University of California, Berkeley, California 94720) .ce additional code and documentation by Joe Felsenstein
This program factors a data set that contains multistate characters, creating a data set consisting entirely of binary (0,1) characters that, in turn, can be used as input to any of the other discrete character programs in this package, except for PARS. Besides this primary function, FACTOR also provides an easy way of deleting characters from a data set. The input format for FACTOR is very similar to the input format for the other discrete character programs except for the addition of character-state tree descriptions.
Note that this program has no way of converting an unordered multistate character into binary characters. This is a weakness of the Old Style discrete characters programs in this package. Fortunately, PARS has joined the package, and it enables unordered multistate characters, in which any state can change to any other in one step, to be analyzed with parsimony.
FACTOR is really for a different case, that in which there are multiple states related on a "character state tree", which specifies for each state which other states it can change to. That graph of states is assumed to be a tree, with no loops in it.
The first line of the input file should contain the number of species and the number of multistate characters. This first line is followed by the lines describing the character-state trees, one description per line. The species information constitutes the last part of the file. Any number of lines may be used for a single species.
The first line is free format with the number of species first, separated by at least one blank (space) from the number of multistate characters, which in turn is separated by at least one blank from the options, if present.
The options are selected from a menu that looks like this:
Factor -- multistate to binary recoding program, version 3.6a3 Settings for this run: A put ancestral states in output file? No F put factors information in output file? No 0 Terminal type (IBM PC, ANSI, none)? (none) 1 Print indications of progress of run Yes Are these settings correct? (type Y or the letter for one to change) |
The options particular to this program are:
The character-state trees are described in free format. The character number of the multistate character is given first followed by the description of the tree itself. Each description must be completed on a single line. Each character that is to be factored must have a description, and the characters must be described in the order that they occur in the input, that is, in numerical order.
The tree is described by listing the pairs of character states that are adjacent to each other in the character-state tree. The two character states in each adjacent pair are separated by a colon (":"). If character fifteen has this character state tree for possible states "A", "B", "C", and "D":
A ---- B ---- C | | | D
then the character-state tree description would be
15 A:B B:C D:B
Note that either symbol may appear first. The ancestral state is identified, if desired, by putting it "adjacent" to a period. If we wanted to root character fifteen at state C:
A <--- B <--- C | | V D
we could write
15 B:D A:B C:B .:C
Both the order in which the pairs are listed and the order of the symbols in each pair are arbitrary. However, each pair may only appear once in the list. Any symbols may be used for a character state in the input except the character that signals the connection between two states (in the distribution copy this is set to ":"), ".", and, of course, a blank. Blanks are ignored completely in the tree description so that even B:DA:BC:B.:C or B : DA : BC : B. : C would be equivalent to the above example. However, at least one blank must separate the character number from the tree description.
If no description line appears in the input for a particular character, then that character will be omitted from the output. If the character number is given on the line, but no character-state tree is provided, then the symbol for the character in the input will be copied directly to the output without change. This is useful for characters that are already coded "0" and "1". Characters can be deleted from a data set simply by listing only those that are to appear in the output.
The last character-state tree description should be followed by a line containing the number "999". This terminates processing of the trees and indicates the beginning of the species information.
The format for the species information is basically identical to the other discrete character programs. The first ten character positions are allotted to the species name (this value may be changed by altering the value of the constant nmlngth at the beginning of the program). The character states follow and may be continued to as many lines as desired. There is no current method for indicating polymorphisms. It is possible to either put blanks between characters or not.
There is a method for indicating uncertainty about states. There is one character value that stands for "unknown". If this appears in the input data then "?" is written out in all the corresponding positions in the output file. The character value that designates "unknown" is given in the constant unkchar at the beginning of the program, and can be changed by changing that constant. It is set to "?" in the distribution copy.
The first line of output will contain the number of species and the number of binary characters in the factored data set followed by the letter "A" if the A option was specified in the input. If option F was specified, the next line will begin "FACTORS". If option A was specified, the line describing the ancestor will follow next. Finally, the factored characters will be written for each species in the format required for input by the other discrete programs in the package. The maximum length of the output lines is 80 characters, but this maximum length can be changed prior to compilation.
In fact, the format of the output file for the A and F options is not correct for the current release of PHYLIP. We need to change their output to write a factors file and an ancestors file instead of putting the Factors and Ancestors information into the data file.
ERRORS
The output should be checked for error messages. Errors will occur in the character-state tree descriptions if the format is incorrect (colons in the wrong place, etc.), if more than one root is specified, if the tree contains loops (and hence is not a tree), and if the tree is not connected, e.g.
A:B B:C D:E
describes
A ---- B ---- C D ---- E
This "tree" is in two unconnected pieces. An error will also occur if a symbol appears in the data set that is not in the tree description for that character. Blanks at the end of lines when the species information is continued to a new line will cause this kind of error.
At the beginning of the program a number of are available to be changed to accomodate larger data sets. These are "maxstates", "maxoutput", "sizearray", "factchar" and "unkchar". The constant "maxstates" gives the maximum number of states per character (set at 20 in the distribution copy). The constant "maxoutput" gives the maximum width of a line in the output file (80 in the distribution copy). The constant "sizearray" must be less than the sum of squares of the numbers of states in the characters. It is initially set to set to 2000, so that although 20 states are allowed (at the initial setting of maxstates) per character, there cannot be 20 states in all of 100 characters.
Particularly important constants are "factchar" and "unkchar" which are not numerical values but a character. Initially set to the colon ":", "factchar" is the character that will be used to separate states in the input of character state trees. It can be changed by changing this constant. (We could have used a hyphen ("-") but didn't because that would make the minus-sign ("-") unavailable as a character state in +/- characters). The constant "unkchar" is the character value in the input data that indicates that the state is unknown. It is set to "?" in the distribution copy. If your computer is one that lacks the colon ":" in its character set or uses a nonstandard character code such as EBCDIC, you will want to change the constant "factchar".
The input file for the program has the default file name "infile" and the output file, the one that has the binary character state data, has the name "outfile".
----SAMPLE INPUT----- | -----Comments (not part of input file) ----- |
4 6 A 1 A:B B:C 2 A:B B:. 4 5 0:1 1:2 .:0 6 .:# #:$ #:% 999 Alpha CAW00# Beta BBX01% Gamma ABY12# Epsilon CAZ01$ |
4 species; 6 characters; A option on A ---- B ---- C B ---> A Character 3 deleted; 4 unchanged 0 ---> 1 ---> 2 % <--- # ---> $ Signals end of trees Species information begins |
---SAMPLE OUTPUT----- | -----Comments (not part of output file) ----- |
5 8 A ANCESTOR ??0?0000 Alpha 11100000 Beta 10001001 Gamma 00011100 Epsilon 11101010 |
5 species (incl. anc.); 8 factors Chars. 1 and 2 come from old number 1 Char. 3 comes from old number 2 Char. 4 is old number 4 Chars. 5 and 6 come from old number 5 Chars. 7 and 8 come from old number 6 |