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The bioinformatics community has assembled some great software package repositories such as Bioconductor and Bioconda (and probably others I'm not aware of).
Scientists who create new tools should try, where possible, to release them as part of these framework to increase ease of access, interoperability and benchmarking.
Related to this, software documentation is of paramount importance. Aside from the obvious requirement of a manual, developers should also aim to provide vignettes/tutorials for the most common use cases. IIRC this is enforced in submissions to Bioconductor.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
A couple related blogposts mentioned in #11 - essentially, open science practice follows from open data repositories with effective annotations and computational tools with reproducible workflows - all pursued in a version controlled environment
The bioinformatics community has assembled some great software package repositories such as Bioconductor and Bioconda (and probably others I'm not aware of).
Scientists who create new tools should try, where possible, to release them as part of these framework to increase ease of access, interoperability and benchmarking.
Related to this, software documentation is of paramount importance. Aside from the obvious requirement of a manual, developers should also aim to provide vignettes/tutorials for the most common use cases. IIRC this is enforced in submissions to Bioconductor.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: