Forum:What Do You Waste Your Time On
26
18
Entering edit mode
11.6 years ago
Asaf 10k

Like in everything else we do, the 80%-20% rule works great in bioinformatics. What is your 80% of the time wasted on? I can suggest:

  1. converting accession numbers between databases
  2. parsing output
scripting • 17k views
ADD COMMENT
49
Entering edit mode
11.6 years ago
Michael 55k

www.biostars.org ;)

ADD COMMENT
28
Entering edit mode
11.6 years ago
zx8754 12k
  1. Converting one file format to another file format.
  2. Converting one file format to another file format.
  3. Converting one file format to another file format.
ADD COMMENT
24
Entering edit mode
11.6 years ago
Emily 24k

Asking people to clarify their question.

Pointing people towards the free online help/tutorial/documentation that already answers their question.

ADD COMMENT
3
Entering edit mode

"Asking people to clarify their question" This has to be number one for me.

ADD REPLY
1
Entering edit mode

After some more thoughts, the process is more akin to helping them to formulate their own questions...

ADD REPLY
2
Entering edit mode

I spend 80% of my time actually reading documentation. But I'm one of a very small number of people who actually do that I think...

ADD REPLY
2
Entering edit mode

What do you mean? Could you please clarify?

ADD REPLY
16
Entering edit mode
11.6 years ago
Medhat 9.8k

learning how to :) over and over

ADD COMMENT
2
Entering edit mode

sadly!...=)

ADD REPLY
13
Entering edit mode
11.6 years ago
Woa ★ 2.9k
  • Trying to find more new tutorials on subjects that I already know much about
  • Browsing references citing one article, and references citing them and references citing them .....ad infinitum
  • Downloading lot of journal articles thinking that their algorithms will come handy some day
  • Browsing through random codes, by goggling filetype:python etc.
ADD COMMENT
12
Entering edit mode
11.6 years ago

Arguing with my lab mates about variant calling pipelines.

ADD COMMENT
2
Entering edit mode

so what is the verdict?

ADD REPLY
2
Entering edit mode

The point is there isn't one :-). Depends on the project.

ADD REPLY
10
Entering edit mode
11.6 years ago

replacing files, versioning, pruning, waiting for stuff to finish running

ADD COMMENT
3
Entering edit mode

yeah, the waiting thing kills sometimes

ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode

I always try to race the program. If I can write a faster version before it finishes running, or add substantial-enough improvements to make the output of the original obsolete, I kill it and start over. That puts a bound on how slow my programs can be - they never take longer to run than they do to write :)

ADD REPLY
8
Entering edit mode
11.6 years ago

Comparing results from different methods takes a lot of time too.

ADD COMMENT
8
Entering edit mode
11.6 years ago
biorepine ★ 1.5k

Installing packages and relevant version of perl and python X.X.X.X.... with out admin privileges :)

ADD COMMENT
1
Entering edit mode

Oh, yeah, this is what kills me the most, Our cluster is not connected to internet for security reasons and image for for R or perl when you are installing a package that has a lot of dependencies. Also if one package works only with recent R versions, make me sick :)

ADD REPLY
2
Entering edit mode

https://github.com/pengchy/RScript/blob/master/download_r_packages.R

Maybe this script will help you.

This script is used to 1) download the latest source packages to local; 2) update local source packages; 3) download dependencies of one specified package

ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode

use conda package manager! ;) or linuxbrew..

ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode

Ah, conda is ok, just don't spam your base envir and you gotta be fine ;-)

ADD REPLY
7
Entering edit mode
9.6 years ago
dago ★ 2.8k

Forgetting to use the -w flag in grep, and therefore repeat all the analysis!!!


ADD COMMENT
6
Entering edit mode
11.6 years ago
Rm 8.3k

book keeping, debugging, keeping pace with version changes of the tools

ADD COMMENT
7
Entering edit mode

For version 2 we decided to change every flag, just to make things more interesting.

ADD REPLY
6
Entering edit mode
11.5 years ago
venks ▴ 740

Trouble shooting for several hours when I Install packages which cannot run just because of outdated python or R version (that too without having system admin privilege)

ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode

use conda manager! ;)

ADD REPLY
5
Entering edit mode
11.6 years ago

The following is an example of R code. It contains a small error, which when hidden in a >200lines scripts causes an error message that is incomprehensible to most human beings. Can you find it?

myarray = c(1,2,3,4,5,)

Most of my time goes wasted fixing silly R syntax errors like this. I really wish Python had more libraries for working with large datasets and plotting :-/.

ADD COMMENT
2
Entering edit mode

Have you looked into rpy or rpy2?

ADD REPLY
5
Entering edit mode
ADD REPLY
1
Entering edit mode

Thank you for both answers :-) But for now I have all my code in R, maybe next time I'll try with pandas.

ADD REPLY
2
Entering edit mode

Simple, the last comma.

ADD REPLY
2
Entering edit mode

If R error messages were more informative, it would already be a huge improvement. What about simply telling us on what file/line the problem is happening?

ADD REPLY
1
Entering edit mode

Are you kidding? Try using R to operate on terabyte hdf5 files.... Have you seen matplotlib? mayavi? Who would waste their time debugging R when you can use better tools in Python? You can always wrap your old R code using Rpy.

ADD REPLY
4
Entering edit mode

You shouldn't be trying to read huge files with R, but you also probably shouldn't be trying to do complex statistics in python. The right tool for the right job. :-)

ADD REPLY
4
Entering edit mode

Actually I find that R has a wider range of options for reading large files than python. You have the rhdf5 library from bioconductor, the sqldf library that allows you to read csv files to a database instead of keeping them in memory, and much more. I have used with great results PyTables for reading HDF5 in python, but I just find that R has more options.

ADD REPLY
1
Entering edit mode

useful information, when I met large data, I will first try shell, then perl. I will try the rhdf5 library in the future.

ADD REPLY
4
Entering edit mode
9.6 years ago
pengchy ▴ 450

Rerun the analysis after finding a bug in the scripts, or found a wrong parameter used, or new data input.

ADD COMMENT
4
Entering edit mode
9.5 years ago
Anima Mundi ★ 2.9k

Reinventing the wheel ;)

ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode

I do that all the time. Totally worthwhile! It's as least as useful as exercising on a treadmill, but more fun.

ADD REPLY
0
Entering edit mode

True, while most time the use of existing tools would save me time and even provide me better solutions, reinventing the wheel is definitely fun and instructive!

ADD REPLY
3
Entering edit mode
11.6 years ago

Searching for data and their quality check.

Searching for hours and hours just to find out that such data does not exist yet. Or that although in 1000 HGP does exist excel with families, they have not been sequenced yet. Trying to find out if the reads are genomic/RNASeq, who published them, male/female and so on..

Converting between formats.

Installing new software.

Waiting for results. I am no good in doing 5 things at the same time :-)

ADD COMMENT
3
Entering edit mode
11.5 years ago
Pals ★ 1.3k

Figuring out which tool to use. Lately, for analyzing miRNA data. Any pipeline suggestions?

ADD COMMENT
3
Entering edit mode

I suggest you take a look at the questions with an miRNA tag on the forum: mirna. You can "Limit to:" recent answers (top left) and "Sort by:" answers or votes (top right) to help you find useful info.

ADD REPLY
3
Entering edit mode
9.5 years ago
forum42008 ▴ 30

A waste of time comes with a loud indicator: Just see how you feel after an activity. Are you energized or drained by it? Are you happy or resentful for it? You know the feeling when you’ve wasted your time. I find all of these a giant waste of my time, but if you don’t, well that’s why we have the comment section, so tell me what you think.

ADD COMMENT
3
Entering edit mode
8.2 years ago
  • Making sure all the analyses I rushed off in an excited whirl are properly written up and documented in reports/notebooks where I should have done them in the first place. Making sure all the labels are rotated correctly, the titles in plain english, the color viewable to color blind people etc....

  • Managing branches across a codebase with 15 collaborators across three forks and tens of branches.

ADD COMMENT
1
Entering edit mode

Aye to the rushed analyses and the last-minute documentation. Horrible, but somehow it happens all the time.

ADD REPLY
2
Entering edit mode
11.6 years ago
Naren ▴ 1000

In here, answering others' questions. :)

ADD COMMENT
2
Entering edit mode
11.6 years ago
enunvillafer ▴ 100

functional interpretation of protein lists from comparative proteomics studies

ADD COMMENT
2
Entering edit mode
11.6 years ago
Raygozak ★ 1.4k

Meddling with incorrectly annotated genes/proteins.

ADD COMMENT
2
Entering edit mode
9.5 years ago
alolex ▴ 960
  1. Trying to stay organized.

  2. Debugging my scripts because a new dataset broke them in an unanticipated way--and just when I thought they were robust to all errors :(

ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode
3.7 years ago
jena ▴ 320

Figuring out how a dataset file had been created (i.e. "Is this the right file? How was it filtered?").

ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode
3.7 years ago
ponganta ▴ 590

Reinventing the wheel. Like, all the time. Why use clusterProfiler with an up-to-date GO-annotation, when you can just write your own client for PANTHER-ORA? Oh, PANTHER does not report genesets back. Why not just write a custom GO-slim for semantic extraction of cognate genes? I guess you only learn by making mistakes.

ADD COMMENT
0
Entering edit mode
3.7 years ago
Juke34 8.9k
  • Trying to understand formats that have

    • too verbose documentation: it take years to understand the subtilities (exception, trap, etc...) or
    • too poor documentation: You end up by reading the code to understand the subtilites or you end up by doing try and fail method until you found how to use it for your purpose, until you have search again because you need it for another tool that need it in a different way.

=> The day you will be confident how to use it, the format will change (updated) or be deprecated, and you start over

  • Trying to understand tools that have

    • too verbose documentation: it take years to understand the subtilities (specific vocabulary and format, exception, trap, etc...) or
    • too poor documentation: You end up by reading the code to understand the subtilites or you end up by doing try and fail method until you found how to use it for your purpose, until you have search again because it does not fit for your new purpose

=> The day you will be confident how to use it, the tool will change (updated) or be deprecated, and you start over

In the past it was a lot about installing tools and dealing with dependencies to get previous tool still working, compilation, etc. Nowadays this task is a routine, but time to time we still find a tool that is a pain to install.

ADD COMMENT

Login before adding your answer.

Traffic: 1899 users visited in the last hour
Help About
FAQ
Access RSS
API
Stats

Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy.

Powered by the version 2.3.6