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#' Merge Regions
#'
#' @description
#' Merges the overlapping regions from two region sets. The two region sets are first merged into one and then overlapping regions are fused.
#'
#' @note
#' All metadata (additional columns in the region set in addition to chromosome, start and end) will be ignored and not present in the returned region set.
#'
#' The implementation relies completely in the \code{\link{reduce}} function from \code{IRanges} package.
#'
#' @usage
#' mergeRegions(A, B)
#'
#' @param A a region set in any of the accepted formats by \code{\link{toGRanges}} (\code{\link{GenomicRanges}}, \code{\link{data.frame}}, etc...)
#' @param B a region set in any of the accepted formats by \code{\link{toGRanges}} (\code{\link{GenomicRanges}}, \code{\link{data.frame}}, etc...)
#'
#' @return
#' It returns a \code{\link{GenomicRanges}} object with the regions resulting from the merging process. Any two overlapping regions from any of the two sets will be fused into one.
#'
#' @seealso \code{\link{plotRegions}}, \code{\link{toDataframe}}, \code{\link{toGRanges}}, \code{\link{subtractRegions}}, \code{\link{splitRegions}}, \code{\link{extendRegions}}, \code{\link{joinRegions}}, \code{\link{commonRegions}}, \code{\link{overlapRegions}}
#'
#' @examples
#' A <- data.frame("chr1", c(1, 5, 20, 30), c(8, 13, 28, 40), x=c(1,2,3,4), y=c("a", "b", "c", "d"))
#'
#' B <- data.frame("chr1", 25, 35)
#'
#' merges <- mergeRegions(A, B)
#'
#' plotRegions(list(A, B, merges), chromosome="chr1", regions.labels=c("A", "B", "merges"), regions.colors=3:1)
#'
#' @export mergeRegions
#'
mergeRegions <- function(A, B) {
if(!hasArg(A)) stop("A is missing")
if(!hasArg(B)) stop("B is missing")
A <- toGRanges(A)
B <- toGRanges(B)
C <- c(A,B, ignore.mcols=TRUE)
return(GenomicRanges::reduce(C))
}
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