Hi Elo,
Unless I've misunderstood you, all you have to do is find the maximum
value (perhaps 2.33, based on your email) and divide all the numbers (in
all PDB files) by this number. You can write a simple Perl/Python
program to do this or, if you're careful to get everything imported and
exp
w settings which have been (and
will be) implemented. :)
Perhaps others have even better solutions to this problem. The use of a
filter is just the first idea which came to my mind. I think it would be
relatively easy to implement, although my python programming skills are
somewhat limited.
Thanks,
Michelle Gill
in to this.
Also, you should post your hardware so that if this is a bug, it can more
easily be tracked down and squashed.
Cheers,
Michelle Gill
Graduate Student
Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry
Yale University
Content-Type=message/rfc822
Content-Description=embedded message
From: Marc Vogt
Hi again,
I just realized you were also having problems with dots, per the pictures on
your website. I was unable to find a 'cure' for this. :(
Michelle Gill
-- Forwarded Message --
Subject: Re: [PyMOL] Fedora 3 problem
Date: Friday 22 April 2005 12:10 pm
From
.8.1
Windows XP
Keep me posted on this!
Michelle Gill
Graduate Student
Yale University
New Haven, CT
> From: Gareth Stockwell
> To: pymol-users
> Organization: European Bioinformatics Institute
> Date: 21 Apr 2005 20:10:08 +0100
> Subject: [PyMOL] Fedora 3 problem
>
>
&
Hi Dustin,
I have used a combination of perl and bash scripts to accomplish something
similar to what you're doing. The one small difference is that I was loading
several PDB files (not SDFs). You'll have to figure out how to do this part
if it's significantly different from the loading comma