\name{asBED} \alias{asBED} \alias{asBED,GRangesList-method} \title{Coerce to BED structure} \description{ Coerce the structure of an object to one following BED-like conventions, i.e., with columns for blocks and thick regions. } \usage{ asBED(x, ...) \S4method{asBED}{GRangesList}(x) } \arguments{ \item{x}{ Generally, a tabular object to structure as BED } \item{\dots}{ Arguments to pass to methods } } \details{ The exact behavior depends on the class of \code{object}. \describe{ \item{\code{GRangesList}}{This treats \code{object} as if it were a list of transcripts, i.e., each element contains the exons of a transcript. The \code{blockStarts} and \code{blockSizes} columns are derived from the ranges in each element. Also, add \code{name} column from \code{names(object)}. } } } \value{ A \code{GRanges}, with the columns \code{name}, \code{blockStarts} and \code{blockSizes} added. } \author{ Michael Lawrence } \examples{ \dontrun{ library(TxDb.Hsapiens.UCSC.hg19.knownGene) exons <- exonsBy(TxDb_Hsapiens_UCSC_hg19_knownGene) values(asBED(exons)) } }