\name{GenomicRangesList-class} \docType{class} % Class: \alias{class:GenomicRangesList} \alias{class:SimpleGenomicRangesList} \alias{GenomicRangesList-class} \alias{SimpleGenomicRangesList-class} % Constructors: \alias{GenomicRangesList} % Coercion \alias{coerce,RangedDataList,GenomicRangesList-method} \title{GenomicRangesList objects} \description{ A \code{GenomicRangesList} is a \code{\link[IRanges:List-class]{List}} of \code{\linkS4class{GenomicRanges}}. It is a virtual class; \code{SimpleGenomicRangesList} is the basic implementation. The subclass \code{\linkS4class{GRangesList}} provides special behavior and is particularly efficient for storing a large number of elements. } \section{Constructor}{ \describe{ \item{}{ \code{GenomicRangesList(\dots)}: Constructs a \code{SimpleGenomicRangesList} with elements taken from the arguments in \dots. If the only argument is a list, the elements are taken from that list. } } } \section{Coercion}{ \describe{ \item{}{ \code{as(from, "GenomicRangesList")}: Supported \code{from} types include: \describe{ \item{RangedDataList}{Each element of \code{from} is coerced to a \code{GenomicRanges}.} } } } } \author{Michael Lawrence} \seealso{ \code{\linkS4class{GRangesList}}, which differs from \code{SimpleGenomicRangesList} in that the \code{GRangesList} treats its elements as single, compound ranges, particularly in overlap operations. \code{SimpleGenomicRangesList} is just a barebones list for now, without that compound semantic. }