\name{cleancdfname} \alias{cleancdfname} \alias{mapCdfName} \title{Clean Affymetrix's CDF name} \description{ This function converts Affymetrix's names for CDF files to the names used in the annotation package and in all Bioconductor. } \usage{ cleancdfname(cdfname, addcdf = TRUE) } \arguments{ \item{cdfname}{A \code{character} denoting Affymetrix'x CDF file name } \item{addcdf}{A \code{logical}. If \code{TRUE} it adds the string "cdf" at the end of the cleaned CDF name. This is used to name the \code{cdfenvs} packages.} } \details{ This function takes a CDF filename obtained from an Affymetrix file (from a CEL file for example) and convert it to a convention of ours: all small caps and only alphanumeric characters. The details of the rule can be seen in the code. We observed exceptions that made us create a set of special cases for mapping CEL to CDF. The object \code{mapCdfName} holds information about these cases. It is a \code{data.frame} of three elements: the first is the name as found in the CDF file, the second the name in the CEL file and the third the name in Bioconductor. \code{mapCdfName} can be loaded using \code{data(mapCdfName)}. } \value{ A \code{character} } \examples{ cdf.tags <- c("HG_U95Av2", "HG-133A") for (i in cdf.tags) cat(i, "becomes", cleancdfname(i), "\n") } \keyword{character}