Actually, imosflm works very nicely indeed on windows, and needs no
third-party package. (Unless you consider ccp4 "third-party" as opposed
to essential.)
phx.
On 23/03/2010 19:38, James Holton wrote:
I have been reminded that the front page of ADXV's website does not
have a link to the "windows version" which requires cygwin, but there
is a binary here:
http://www.scripps.edu/~arvai/adxv/adxv_1.9.6/adxv.cygwin.gz
You will need cygwin installed for that to work. Good news is the
latest versions of NX client and cygwin no longer fight over the
cygwin.dll and you can have them both working happily on a Windows
system.
There is also BDXV: an open-source viewer for ADSC-style *.img files
being developed by the BSCB here at ALS:
http://bcsb.als.lbl.gov/wiki/index.php/BDXV
You will need GTK installed for this to work.
'Fraid I don't know any viewers that don't require a third-party
package on Windows. Unless, of course, you don't mind loading *.img
files into your favorite viewer as "raw". Generally, there is a
512-byte header to *.img files, followed by 2-byte integers
representing the intensity data (that you may need to byte-swap).
-James Holton
MAD Scientist
James Holton wrote:
Although the extension *.img is used by more than one detector
manufacturer, you are probably looking at data from an ADSC Inc
detector? Andy Arvai's "adxv" is a popular viewer for this format:
http://www.scripps.edu/~arvai/adxv.html
Run it with the option "-nopixmap" if you are using it inside an NX
client.
-James Holton
MAD Scientist
Paul Lindblom wrote:
Hi everybody,
does anybody know a program to display x-ray (.img) data images in
windows?
Thanks,
P.