Sorry, I found the answer to my own question.
madd 1 -10 If you don't use xframes, then it won't add additional frames to single-state objects. I can't quite figure out the rationale for that but if you already have pre-loaded states before you use mset, you can't request additional frames. However if I didn't want to map 1 state to 1 frame, this makes it impossible. For instance #show each state for 3 frames madd 1 -30 x90 seems impossible now, but close enough, Jordan On Nov 10, 2012, at 11:46 PM, Jordan Willis <jwillis0...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi List, > > I figured out a hack way to fix my last question. That's ok, because I have > another one. In my movie I have some objects with multiple states, and some > objects with one. Is there a way to use mset (or in my case madd) for the > multiple state objects and disregard the other objects? > > For some reason mset and madd when working with multi-state objects using > this command: > > mset 1 -10 x10 > > is giving the multi-state objects ten frames but then appending the > single-state objects an additional 10 frames. Does anyone know if this can be > done? > > sorry to spam the list, > > Jordan > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Everyone hates slow websites. So do we. Make your web apps faster with AppDynamics Download AppDynamics Lite for free today: http://p.sf.net/sfu/appdyn_d2d_nov _______________________________________________ PyMOL-users mailing list (PyMOL-users@lists.sourceforge.net) Info Page: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/pymol-users Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/pymol-users@lists.sourceforge.net