From: Serge C. <co...@em...> - 2002-09-27 12:33:46
|
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Hi again, I posted a question few days ago about the way to center on a particular zone of a structure without using the zoom command (which would touch a lot of view parameters at once). I've just figured out that I might be able to do more or less what I wanted by producing proper get_view blocks. In that respect I need to know what the different numbers are good for: I have the impression that the block correspond to plenty of info: orientation, translation position (ie center of view), cliping, zooming... (at least from the doc of pymol, and personnal use). Thanks for any info on that. Serge. - ---------------------------------------------------- Serge Cohen GPG Key ID: 1024D/69B1D346 - ---------------------------------------------------- -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.7 (Darwin) iD8DBQE9lFAqMygj1Wmx00YRAlcXAJwLY5hXStpUKyyvklqzxi+NYb0DbgCghTFN D2nsSa1VJrfsWX17LN42bls= =niY8 -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
From: <pm...@ua...> - 2002-10-02 18:53:05
|
Quoting Serge Cohen <co...@em...>: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > Hi again, > > I posted a question few days ago about the way to center on a particular > zone of a structure without using the zoom command (which would touch a > lot of view parameters at once). Dear Serge, I think that the following code works in the way you want - it brings the selection to center of the screen, at the same setting it as the center of rotation: cmd.origin(selection) m = cmd.get_view(0) n = m[0:9]+(0.0,0.0)+m[11:] cmd.set_view(n) Regards, Paulo |