\name{genomeBlocks} \alias{genomeBlocks} \alias{genomeBlocks,numeric-method} \alias{genomeBlocks,BSgenome-method} \title{ Creates bins across a genome. } \description{ Creates a compact \code{GRanges} representation of bins across specified chromosomes of a given genome. } \usage{ \S4method{genomeBlocks}{numeric}(genome, chrs = names(genome), width = NULL, spacing = width) \S4method{genomeBlocks}{BSgenome}(genome, chrs = seqnames(genome), width = NULL, spacing = width) } \arguments{ \item{genome}{Either a \code{BSgenome} object, or a named vector of integers (names being choromosome names, integers being the chromosome lengths), to get the chromosome lengths from.} \item{chrs}{A \code{vector} containing which chromosomes to create bins across. May either be numeric indicies or chromosome names. Default is all chromosomes given by \code{genome}.} \item{width}{The width in base pairs of each bin.} \item{spacing}{The space between the centres of each adjacent bin. By default, is equal to the \code{spacing} parameter, which gives non-overlapping bins. Values larger than \code{spacing} will give overlapping bins, and values smaller than \code{spacing} will give gaps between each bin.} } \value{Returns a \code{GRanges} object, compatible with direct usage in \code{\link{annotationBlocksCounts}}} \author{Aaron Statham} \seealso{\code{\link{annotationBlocksCounts}}} \examples{ chr.lengths <- c(800, 200, 200) names(chr.lengths) <- c("chr1", "chr2", "chr3") genomeBlocks(chr.lengths, width = 200) }