- Newick format
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In mathematics, Newick tree format (or Newick notation or New Hampshire tree format) is a way to represent graph-theoretical trees with edge lengths using parentheses and commas. It was adopted by James Archie, William H. E. Day, Joseph Felsenstein, Wayne Maddison, Christopher Meacham, F. James Rohlf, and David Swofford, at two meetings in 1986, the second of which was at Newick's restaurant in Dover, New Hampshire, US. The adopted format is a generalization of the format developed by Meacham in 1984 for the first tree-drawing programs in Felsenstein's PHYLIP package.[1]
Contents
Examples
The following tree:
could be represented in Newick format in several ways
(,,(,)); no nodes are named (A,B,(C,D)); leaf nodes are named (A,B,(C,D)E)F; all nodes are named (:0.1,:0.2,(:0.3,:0.4):0.5); all but root node have a distance to parent (:0.1,:0.2,(:0.3,:0.4):0.5):0.0; all have a distance to parent (A:0.1,B:0.2,(C:0.3,D:0.4):0.5); distances and leaf names (popular) (A:0.1,B:0.2,(C:0.3,D:0.4)E:0.5)F; distances and all names ((B:0.2,(C:0.3,D:0.4)E:0.5)F:0.1)A; a tree rooted on a leaf node (rare)
Newick format is typically used for tools like PHYLIP and is a minimal definition for a phylogenetic tree.
Rooted, unrooted, and binary trees
When an unrooted tree is represented in Newick notation, an arbitrary node is chosen as its root. Whether rooted or unrooted, typically a tree's representation is rooted on an internal node and it is rare (but legal) to root a tree on a leaf node.
A rooted binary tree that is rooted on an internal node has exactly two immediate descendant nodes for each internal node. An unrooted binary tree that is rooted on an arbitrary internal node has exactly three immediate descendant nodes for the root node, and each other internal node has exactly two immediate descendant nodes. A binary tree rooted from a leaf has at most one immediate descendant node for the root node, and each internal node has exactly two immediate descendant nodes.
Grammar
A grammar for parsing the Newick format:
The grammar nodes
Tree: The full input Newick Format for a single tree Subtree: an internal node (and its descendants) or a leaf node Leaf: a leaf node Internal: an internal node (and its descendants) BranchSet: a set of one or more Branches Branch: a tree edge and its descendant subtree. Name: the name of a node Length: the length of a tree edge.
The grammar rules
Note, "|" separates alternatives.
Tree --> Subtree ";" | Branch ";" Subtree --> Leaf | Internal Leaf --> Name Internal --> "(" BranchSet ")" Name BranchSet --> Branch | BranchSet "," Branch Branch --> Subtree Length Name --> empty | string Length --> empty | ":" number
Whitespace (spaces, tabs, carriage returns, and linefeeds) within number is prohibited. Whitespace within string is often prohibited. Whitespace elsewhere is ignored. Sometimes the Name string must be of a specified fixed length. The Tree --> Branch ";" production makes the entire tree descendant from nowhere, which can be nonsensical, and is sometimes prohibited.
Note that when a tree having more than one leaf is rooted from one of its leaves, a representation that is rarely seen in practice, the root leaf is characterized as an Internal node by the above grammar. Generally, a root node labeled as Internal should be construed as a leaf if and only if it has exactly one Branch in its BranchSet. One can make a grammar that formalizes this distinction by replacing the above Tree production rule with
Tree --> RootLeaf ";" | RootInternal ";" | Branch ";" RootLeaf --> Name | "(" Branch ")" Name RootInternal --> "(" BranchSet "," Branch ")" Name
The first RootLeaf production is for a tree with exactly one leaf. The second RootLeaf production is for rooting a tree from one of its two or more leaves.
See also
- DOT language
- Gary Olsen's Interpretation of the "Newick's 8:45" Tree Format Standard [1]
- phyloXML
- Miyamoto and Goodman's Phylogram of Eutherian Mammals An example of a large phylogram with its Newick format representation.
References
Categories:- Trees (structure)
- Graph description languages
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