From: Robert H. <ha...@st...> - 2010-05-28 21:46:47
|
Ah, yes. I was thinking about movies as well. An interesting aspect of this is the undo/redo capability -- there are two buffers, and you can back up and "re-write" the steps in a forward motion again. It definitely is the basis for a "story-board" approach to making animations. But it will take some serious thinking to do this right. Of course, now you can save the states as JPGs or PNGs, and those images will have the state in them, so they would serve either as movies (with morphing, perhaps?) or as Jmol animations. No end to ideas.... On Fri, May 28, 2010 at 4:00 PM, Wayne Decatur <wde...@ya...> wrote: > Bob, the docking and modeling abilities are great. > > I think with users issuing a write statement in the console at various > points while doing the docking that this would allow a way to save some of > the intermediates as models so ultimately an animation of the movements can > be replayed forward or backward in some manner as a scene with Jmol without > user interaction later. This would also be useful for when there is already > a solved ligand and you want to simulate the theoretical movements that > happened just before its binding because that makes a great visual to really > draw in viewers to the scene of the action. Is there anyway that eventually > making such an animated scene could be made easier, say with an implemented > way of generating new frames (snapshots) on the fly at certain points > specified by the user (or maybe even automatically when the item being moved > has moved certain amount of distance?) so that no one has to edit in a word > processor to generate multi-model file themselves? > > Thanks, > Wayne > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > > _______________________________________________ > Jmol-users mailing list > Jmo...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/jmol-users > > -- Robert M. Hanson Professor of Chemistry St. Olaf College 1520 St. Olaf Ave. Northfield, MN 55057 http://www.stolaf.edu/people/hansonr phone: 507-786-3107 If nature does not answer first what we want, it is better to take what answer we get. -- Josiah Willard Gibbs, Lecture XXX, Monday, February 5, 1900 |