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  1. STRING: functional protein association networks

    STRING is a database of known and predicted protein-protein interactions and a functional enrichment tool.

  2. String (computer science) - Wikipedia

    Strings are typically made up of characters, and are often used to store human-readable data, such as words or sentences. In computer programming, a string is traditionally a sequence of characters, …

  3. String - JavaScript | MDN - MDN Web Docs

    May 22, 2026 · Strings can be created as primitives, from string literals, or as objects, using the String () constructor: String primitives and string objects share many behaviors, but have other important …

  4. What is a String? - W3Schools.com

    What is a String? A string is a sequence of characters, usually used to represent text such as words or sentences. Strings are one of the most common data types in programming, and are enclosed in …

  5. Java Strings - W3Schools

    A String in Java is actually an object, which means it contains methods that can perform certain operations on strings. For example, you can find the length of a string with the length () method:

  6. What is String - Definition & Meaning - GeeksforGeeks

    Jul 23, 2025 · In Data Structures and Algorithms (DSA), a String can also be defined as a sequence of characters, stored in contiguous memory locations, terminated by a special character called the null …

  7. Introduction to Strings - GeeksforGeeks

    Jan 20, 2026 · Strings are sequences of characters. The differences between a character array and a string are, a string is terminated with a special character ‘\0’ and strings are typically immutable in …

  8. Access - STRING functional protein association networks

    Jan 19, 2019 · 356'775 proteins in 110 organisms.

  9. String.com — Build and run agents with AI

    What do you want to automate?

  10. STRING - SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics - Expasy

    STRING is the knowledgebase of known and predicted protein-protein interactions. It includes direct (physical) and indirect (functional) associations derived from various sources, such as genomic …