this is a part of samtools mpileup result:
chr7 55241514 G 2786 .....................
chr7 55241515 C 2786 .....................
chr7 55241516 C 2786 .....................
chr7 55241517 G 2786 .....................
chr7 55241518 T 2786 .....................
chr7 55241519 G 2786 .$.$.$.$.$.$.$.$.$.$.
chr7 55241520 G 2776 .....................
chr7 55241521 C 2776 .....................
chr7 55241522 T 2776 .....................
chr7 55241523 G 2774 .....................
chr7 55241524 C 2774 .....................
chr7 55241525 T 2774 .....................
chr7 55241526 G 2723 .....................
chr7 55241527 G 2723 .$.$.$.$.$.$.$.$.$.$.
chr7 55241609 C 7999 ......^F.^F.^F.^F.^F.
chr7 55241610 C 7999 .....................
chr7 55241611 C 7999 .....................
chr7 55241612 A 7999 .....................
chr7 55241613 G 7999 .....................
chr7 55241614 C 7999 .....................
chr7 55241615 T 7999 .....................
chr7 55241616 T 7999 .....................
I don't know the meaning of "^F", I have consulted the help of mpileup commander, a symbol ‘^’ marks the start of a read. The ASCII of the character following ‘^’ minus 33 gives the mapping quality. A symbol ‘$’ marks the end of a read segment. and it didn't say anything about "F", does anybody know what's meaning of "F" in this result.
You almost found the answer by yourself:
... a symbol ‘^’ marks the start of a read. The ASCII of the character following ‘^’ minus 33 gives the mapping quality.
So 'F' encodes the mapping quality of one read starting at that position (I think Steve talks about base call qualities instead). Qualities are phred scores, i.e. log-scaled error probabilities: P = 10^(-Q/10). You can derive the numeric value for your quality by checking an ASCII table (e.g. man ascii) and then subtract 33. F translates into 70, which gives a mapping quality of 37. The definition of mapping quality varies per aligner but in theory this means that there is a 10^(-37/10)=0.01% chance of misalignment of that one read starting in that column.
Andreas